toolsntat
Yep, I collect tools and tat
Is it possible without calling in the snooker table boys?
All hints, tips and advice welcome....
Cheers Andy
All hints, tips and advice welcome....
Cheers Andy
my 5.4m x 2.7m shed had dropped a bit in one corner -its sitting on 4 steel I beams and one was low -I bought a cheap car trolley jack from halfords -dug out under the beam stuck in a bit of ply and used the jack -it worked a treat, I raised it about 15mm no probsNever done it but I know how I would tackle it.
Car trolley jack for the lift.
Solid piece of timber balanced vertically on the jack (4x4 or 6x6 offcut)
A robust + heavy steel beam balanced on that to spread the load across the full width of the table at one end at a time. Something like an old lintel or I beam from the scrapyard that will take half a ton without bending.
A strip of timber on top to protect the bottom of your snooker table from any stress points and damage from the metal.
You will need a couple of helpers to hold the metal in place while you get the jack lined up and take the weight. Your lifting gear will look like an unstable T shape.
Don't put your fingers under the feet when you are slotting the packing pieces into place
Rinse and repeat at the other end.
Don't forget a photo to show us how you did it in the end
I have actually done this in order to place castors beneath the legs. I used some plates from Machine Mart which have 3 castors on each plate.Is it possible without calling in the snooker table boys?
All hints, tips and advice welcome....
Cheers Andy
I would echo the caution in this post. If you want to continue to use it as a snooker table then you need to treat it as a piece of precision machinery. Personally, I would get some expert advice.There are 2 qualities of full-size snooker table: 5-piece, and 4-piece, beds. The 5-piece are considered to be better, as the joins in the bed do not occur in line with the side pockets. When the tables are installed, fillers are used to avoid any mismatch at the joins. Lifting the table at one position could bend the frame, which might cause the filler to be pushed up into the cloth. The only safe way to lift the table without removing the slates, is with similarly-threaded screw-jacks spread evenly around the table. (I sold my snooker table 20 years ago. The buyer took it apart: 6 strong young men (building workers) struggled with each section of slate: 8 SYM struggled with the frame, even after all the cushions, etc., were removed. Not a job to be undertaken lightly.)
Enter your email address to join: