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Fear of falling: safety on ladders?

bayviewsignworks

New Member
We're lettering 53 trailers and have been using two ladders with a plank on the steps. We get higher than 6' and it is dangerous. What does everyone do to be OSHA and common sense compliant? I'm going get a couple harnesses but I still wonder what everyone else is doing.
 

bayviewsignworks

New Member
Fear of falling...

Yes but most of the time our space is limited and we're constantly moving them. Do you happen to have a picture of what you use? Do you use a harness?
 

Pat Whatley

New Member
Scaffolding. You want to letter 53 trailers from walkboards go right ahead but personally I'd work out a way to use scaffolding before I ever got started.
 

klemgraphics

New Member
Scaffolding. You want to letter 53 trailers from walkboards go right ahead but personally I'd work out a way to use scaffolding before I ever got started.
I use to use walkboards outside, now that I can get them inside the shop we use rolling scaffolding. It paid for itself on the first trailer it was used on, plus I haven't had to visit the hospital due to any falls. No way would I ever get out the walkboard for them anymore.
 

Craig Sjoquist

New Member
53 trailers or 53 foot trailers
anyway when I hand lettered them years back we would park them side by side about 6-7 ft plus apart roll scaffold in planks in between and do two sides at once sorta speak
finish 5 in 2 days
 

MikePro

New Member
i use 2 little giants and the plank, as well... its only 6' above the ground, there's no OSHA standard for that.

if you're really worried about it, setup scaffolding... its cheap to rent if you don't have your own. just keep driving trucks through it like a gas pump, letter-em up, and keep em moving!
 

John L

New Member
Go to your local commercial building supply warehouse (the one that sells drywall by the tractor trailer load, not home depot) and buy a "baker scaffold" for about $450. Do not get the harbor freight version or the real narrow, hinged version with the loose metal plank boards the home centers sell.
 

cajun312

New Member
If the lettering on the trailer isn't way up at the top, I like to work out the back of my pick up truck, standing on the bed rail. Not the safest way but it works for me. For the higher stuff I use a scaffold, I hate to work from a ladder.
 

TheSnowman

New Member
You are doing FIFTY THREE trailers? If I had to move ladders around that much for that, I'd lose my mind. We have a scissors lift, so I'd be using that. If you can snag a good deal on renting one, I'd think it would save you a lot of time...but I know budget probably wouldn't allow room for that. That's a lot of moving ladders.
 

blueben

New Member
I use a scissor lift for most things. They are fairly cheap to rent just make sure you figure that in your cost for installation. We just did 40 Trailers about a month ago and that made it really easy for us. It also helps that my brother in la owns an equipment rental place as well. I pretty much come get what i need and pay him with stickers for the equipment and whatever else he needs.
 

BobM

New Member
Baker staging with safety rails on wheels. With the platform on the top level you are in just the right position to letter a 13'6" high trailer. Doesn't take up to much room, plenty of stability, room for rolls of graphics, tools, completly safe. Retails for about $700. One person can set up and take down. Ideal.
 

johnnysigns

New Member
I've never been able to wrap or letter trailers faster than using walkboards and ladders. You can hang three to four panels before moving the setup. Scaffolding will have you at two or three at the most and a scissor lift isn't much different.

Generally a 53' footer is 13'6" so it can get a little wobbly when you're that high on the rungs, but I had good success in switching to larger fiberglass ladders that were much more stable for those clients.
 

andy

New Member
We used to spec our panel vans with a fully decked roof platform and a little ladder bolted onto the back door... pretty cheap, easy to move :) and ready to use as soon as you hit site.
 

CheapVehicleWrap

New Member
You are doing FIFTY THREE trailers? If I had to move ladders around that much for that, I'd lose my mind. We have a scissors lift, so I'd be using that. If you can snag a good deal on renting one, I'd think it would save you a lot of time...but I know budget probably wouldn't allow room for that. That's a lot of moving ladders.

I would certainly hope there's room in the budget to rent a scissors lift doing 53 trailers. If not, something is seriously wrong.
 

Signguyno1

New Member
Here are several pict's of steeple jack installing a weather vane I restored for a local church.

Note the extesion ladder with another ladder tied too it so as to reach the top, installer had a safety rope tied around his waist and to the ladder about fifteen feet below himself.
 

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1leonchen

New Member
invest in a scaffolding with wheels.ladders work great though. a harness is not going to work the snap rope is between 4 - 6 feet stretch or other wise u will be in serious pain when u fall. stop looking down and fretting about the fall. the more u worry about falling the more u will fall. i have been to 7 floors no harness.crazy yes and no. a harness makes u cowardly( my opinion) and restrict flexibility.
 

GypsyGraphics

New Member
Here are several pict's of steeple jack installing a weather vane I restored for a local church.

HOLY SH!T... that's insane!

oh the irony... putting up a whether vain and praying for NO WIND!
even God had to be thinking... wouldn't it be funny if...
 
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