Thats fine if you don't mind heights! I suppose it could also come in handy in later life instead of fitting a stairlift.I've never used one before, but it's a game changer as far as doing repairs up high on an old house.
Thats fine if you don't mind heights! I suppose it could also come in handy in later life instead of fitting a stairlift.I've never used one before, but it's a game changer as far as doing repairs up high on an old house.
Nah, no contest, an early Fordson Standard on rubber or as suggested the little grey Fergie.Or a caravan motormover
I'm scared of heights. The cherry picker will fit through a double door, so I might be able get it in the house. probably cheaper than a stair lift.Thats fine if you don't mind heights! I suppose it could also come in handy in later life instead of fitting a stairlift
I like the Fordson Major, it's what I drove when I was young. The sound of it when pulling a few tons of grain up a hill.....fantastic!!Nah, no contest, an early Fordson Standard on rubber or as suggested the little grey Fergie.
The guy who used to do our roof maintenance/gutter clearing is no longer available. He'd climb out of our skylight and clamber about without a qualm, despite it being a 30/40 foot drop onto concrete tiles all round.It looks like a quality tower. I have one of those really cheap DIY towers. It was OK for reaching high hedges, but wasn't high enough to reach chimneys.
The guy that fitted my chimney liner just used a ladder to reach to the chimney, then climbed up standing on top of it without a care in the world. No safety harness, nothing. I literally couldn't watch him. The thought of it made my knees shake!
I seem to recall you tried a ride on lawn tractor but not enough traction.I like the Fordson Major, it's what I drove when I was young. The sound of it when pulling a few tons of grain up a hill.....fantastic!!
I did find a short term solution for moving the cherry picker in the garden. I just used a rope and my endless chain to pull it into position. A bit slow, but I got it where I wanted.
thanks. great idea, I just ordered a pair. I was needing new tyres anyway. The old ones were cracked and leaked.I got a set of agri/chevron tyres fitted and had no more problems skidding. That might be a cheaper option.
I'm sure it would be a nightmare of health and safety/risk assessment with local authorities if I set up a giraffe dental practice, or tried to use it in a public place.Makes me think of other uses. Wedding photographer, giraffe dentist, going to see sports events without paying to get in
I wish I had a Pecan treeGolly, wish we had one of those.
The only alternative was my wife ( carefully ) climbed the pecan tree with a pole saw. The pecan is now at a more manageable height and the wife survived.
... it's a game changer as far as doing repairs up high on an old house....
It wasn't Chekov by any chance.?A toy I wouldn't mind having too.
I don't see, in the picture, you wearing a fall protection harness. You should as you never know when you are going to be boinked out of the cage. They are required in all job site man lifts here and I would assume for you too.
I had a buddy that had access to a smaller one when he redid his roof. He used it among other things to lift all the asphalt shingles to the roof, a couple bundles at a time. It actually came from a cherry orchard.
Pete
yes, it's 20 years old. It has alarms on the legs. I always make double sure the pads are very well supported. One good consequence of being scared of heights is being paranoid about the pads being on stable ground using additional material below the pads on grass. My one also has movable wheels. It will pass through a 1metre opening and just 1.9m high. It doesn't have the boom arm or hydraulic stabilisers. That would put it out of my price range. Spares are very expensive. Most are proprietary parts. There were a couple of iffy problems with the unit, but not serious enough to put me off purchasing. I was straightening a squint chimney pot yesterday. It's been squint since we moved into the house 40+ years ago and it always annoyed me. Now it's straight.Just realised that that's a really early model - the one I hired had hydraulic support legs with pressure alarms - if a pad started to become unweighted it prevented you from moving the cage further out. You could move the wheels out for road use and then in again for moving around through narrow spaces between flowerbeds & the house etc. There's also a self-powered version that has electric motors for the wheels which is a damn sight easier than pulling it around the place over uneven ground!
That was one of the cheapest models we had seen. Second hand prices are silly.£5000 made my eyes water but I shouldn't be surprised by current prices.
At my house in France I had a nasty scare pulling a load of logs for the wood burner up to the house when the Westwood lost grip and jack knifed back down the hill. It just had the normal turf tyres on so I got a set of agri/chevron tyres fitted and had no more problems skidding. That might be a cheaper option.
How about a landie or sj410?!Nah, no contest, an early Fordson Standard on rubber or as suggested the little grey Fergie.
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