02-09-2018, 08:20 AM
If I need my garage for something else temporarily, the car lives outside under a semi-tailored cover sewn up from scrap upholstery vinyl.
Simon
Simon
The following warnings occurred: | ||||||||||||
Warning [2] Undefined variable $search_thread - Line: 60 - File: showthread.php(1617) : eval()'d code PHP 8.1.31 (Linux)
|
Hanging a car from the roof.
|
02-09-2018, 08:20 AM
If I need my garage for something else temporarily, the car lives outside under a semi-tailored cover sewn up from scrap upholstery vinyl.
Simon
02-09-2018, 08:24 AM
Hedd, I applaud your creativity, but imagine if this goes bad....
I solved a temporary space problem by using a classic car storage company based locally (near Milton Keynes), the rates were not excessive and the car came back unblemished.
02-09-2018, 08:43 AM
And another more conventional, and safer, solution is to install a car lift - can work for storage and maintenance - including friends' cars!
Colin
02-09-2018, 08:46 AM
02-09-2018, 09:09 AM
02-09-2018, 09:23 AM
Its going up in the air. Trust me gents. This is a long term soloution. Tents are out of the question. As is renting more space.
Car lift no good. Have to put stuff at least 10foot high under it. Besides car lifts cost money and take up space. It doesnt drip oil. There is oil in it mind. And I have just filled the bores with paraffin. However given what else is in the shed dripping oil is no problem. I intend to carry out the lift using materials allready in stock. 4x2 and 8x2 timbers will make a very strong spreader beam. The lack of wings means the complex lifting tackle to keep the straps away from them are not needed. The simpler.the better. The most difficult bit will be hanging the chain block off the roof. Current thinking is to go for a ride on a pallet on the loadall forks.
02-09-2018, 09:50 AM
30' to the rafters? Sounds like plenty of Hedd room. I have an MOT brake test certificate somewhere whith weights at both axles. Its for a Ruby derived 4 seat tourer, so you may not think useful, but it would help determine an approximate CoG.
02-09-2018, 10:49 AM
Thinking slightly sideways again:
If long enough, 8 x 2 fore and aft, under the car, inside the wheels. Front axle will sit on, and a block at the rear will allow the axle to take the weight, not the shocks. Wheels attached at two points each so axles become the spreaders. You have the height, so can extend fore and aft to allow the suspension ropes to meet at a point overhead, without extra spreaders. I like things that at first seem daft. Its no great weight, is it? I would put a secondary set of ropes to the rafters, just in case.......mice, or something. I kept a boat overhead so I could work on "Alice" in the garage whilst also keeping the boat dry. That did go slightly wrong, though, and the boat ended up with a hole in it the shape of Alice's radiator cap! Simon
02-09-2018, 11:04 AM
(01-09-2018, 09:51 PM)Hedd Jones Wrote: Has anyone hung a car from a chain block?You can easily get a good idea of where the centre of gravity is by jacking up the car on a trolley jack using a large section wooden beam (2 bits of 4x2 bolted together?) across the chassis, trying different positions just off the floor until you can rock it with one finger. Just a suggestion. Robert Leigh
02-09-2018, 12:25 PM
|
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|