EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
This is one of my VERY FAVORITE stores to buy stuff from. They are extremly fast, very competitive on their prices and they have EVERYTHING!!!!!:thumbsup::thumbsup:
Eddie
I've found those to be great for non-motorized gates. They allow for misalignment which can happen. They life forever if the gate is used often and they are cheap to make. You just have to use a little imagination when it comes to design.
I've been away, I check the site every day, because of current interests, the housing for the poor using recycled plastics.
In July I broke my right hand, stupid move on my part. Then about five weeks ago I busted up my left shoulder in a fall on a plow. Tuesday I go in for surgery. I have a complete tear of one tendon from the rotator cuff and a large tear of another. They won't know until they get in there whether they're going to reattach it too.
My options are to have about thirty percent use of my left arm above my ribs and a lot of pain or surgery. I'm going with surgery. Some might see 63 as too old to plan on doing what I do but then others will see 63 as too young to quit.
The good things is I'm in good health, no heart problems, diabetes, etc. I take no medicines, no alcohol or drug use, and I get a fair amount of exercise. The surgery is supposed to be its own kind of hades but the good thing is this is only the second surgery of my life. The first was for tonsils removal about thirty years ago.
I take some satisfaction in my only visits to the docs involves injuries, still being stupid after all of these years.
Why do you stagger the supports for the gates, in one post you called it a truss effect. Is there a method to know how many and where to place them?
All buildings are held in place by the triangle. It is where you get your strength. Your house would fall down withou the triangle disigned into the corners of your walls. Tables and chairs have them built into the legs to hold them steady, and a truss relies on the ablity of a triangle to lock everything into position to hold it in place. A truss is only as strong as the materials used.
A gate is a free spaning truss without very much load. Putting a brace from one corner to the other will give it all the strength that it needs if you use the proper materials.
You can use lighter materials and have more triangles, or heavier, stronger materials and less bracing.
Eddie
When looking at Harvs gates he does not use triangles.
You don't always see the triangle, but it's there
headscratching phase.