• I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes. Click to Support Signs101 ...

How to hang this Plexi sign

Drip Dry

New Member
Need to hang a 4 x 4 plexi sign from the ceiling ( sounds pretty heavy)
Customer is asking for no holes.

Anyone have any suggestions for hanging this with some type of concealed method

Thanks
 

The Hobbyist

New Member
Can you post a photo of the sign? Is is a single-sided plex sign with vinyl, or a double-sided sign?

It has to be secure. If it fell, it could slice someone's head in half! :omg:

Perhaps a nice wooden (oak?) frame that is slotted for the plex, and assembled around the plex. Hangers installed into the top of the wood?

The customer may not want holes, but with that much weight, you want to make sure it will not fall.
 

Gman75

New Member
Mirror clips

What about using mirror clip hangers.
If he means no holes on the ceiling then there's no choice but
to use some kind of adhesive. Maybe double sided gorilla tape.
 

Billct2

Active Member
No holes? No holes in the ceiling? No holes in the sign? What kind of ceiling?
I think Criss Angel could help with this one.
 

Chasez

New Member
A little more information would be helpful. 4x4 but what thickness? makes a difference. http://standoffs.ca/ has a decent selection of hardware that you could use to grip the edge and mount it to the ceiling or a cable/rod system.

Chaz
 

Marlene

New Member
hangups.com look for trak inserts. you mount a bar to the ceiling. on the plexi you drill holes along the top and fit in a plastic rivet and washer that mkaes kind of a wheel. that part goes into the bar and is unseen. not sure what thickness you are using but the signs I've installed are 3mm or .125" thick plastic
 

Chasez

New Member
A little more information would be helpful. 4x4 but what thickness? makes a difference. http://standoffs.ca/ has a decent selection of hardware that you could use to grip the edge and mount it to the ceiling or a cable/rod system.

Chaz
 

Drip Dry

New Member
It will be 3/16 single sided.
Customer is looking for no holes in the sign, but will take it if it has to be.

I'm thinking some type of carving foam. Paint it and letter it with vinyl. I think it
would be lighter and I can mount something to the backside but I'm not sure if it would be too costly.

I like the idea of a wooden frame around it
I'll also looked at hangups and did see the trax stuff, but maybe I didn't fully understand how it worked
I'll look again
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
Technically, you shouldn't be considering using a substrate of that size or weight, if the customer is gonna put ridiculous restrictions on you. I'd either introduce gatorboard or tell him to hang his own sign. You must consider safety and codes first, before you bend to someone whims about magical hangers. You'll hafta put some kind of mechanical fasteners in the ceiling, so you'll be making holes in the ceiling or hanging it from rafters. To support the 4 x 4, you should use some physical fastening system, also.
 

Drip Dry

New Member
Technically, you shouldn't be considering using a substrate of that size or weight, if the customer is gonna put ridiculous restrictions on you. I'd either introduce gatorboard or tell him to hang his own sign. You must consider safety and codes first, before you bend to someone whims about magical hangers. You'll hafta put some kind of mechanical fasteners in the ceiling, so you'll be making holes in the ceiling or hanging it from rafters. To support the 4 x 4, you should use some physical fastening system, also.

I'm not hanging it. The customer is, but is asking how to hang it without holes. And as I said in my post, he's not married to it

But I definitely like the Gatorfoam idea
 

visual800

Active Member
why plex? why not foamboard or 1/8 pvc. he is going to have to have holes it. people get on my nerves with ignorant demands.
 

eahicks

Magna Cum Laude - School of Hard Knocks
Definitely need to know what type of ceiling....drop? Drywall? Open air girders?
 

Andy D

Active Member
Technically, you shouldn't be considering using a substrate of that size or weight, if the customer is gonna put ridiculous restrictions on you. I'd either introduce gatorboard or tell him to hang his own sign. You must consider safety and codes first, before you bend to someone whims about magical hangers. You'll hafta put some kind of mechanical fasteners in the ceiling, so you'll be making holes in the ceiling or hanging it from rafters. To support the 4 x 4, you should use some physical fastening system, also.

Yeah, I won't even install that size acrylic on the wall if it has stand-offs, too much liability, and I'm not sure you would be 100% non liable even with
the customer doing the install.
 
Yeah, I won't even install that size acrylic on the wall if it has stand-offs, too much liability, and I'm not sure you would be 100% non liable even with
the customer doing the install.


That's like saying home depot would be liable for selling a sheet of plywood because the contractor took it and hung it from some clothespins from the side of his building and it fell and hit someone.
 

Andy D

Active Member
That's like saying home depot would be liable for selling a sheet of plywood because the contractor took it and hung it from some clothespins from the side of his building and it fell and hit someone.

Not really the same thing, it's a custom made product and the customer told them how it is being used and asking advice of the best way to mount it.
It's more like making a custom gun for someone that you know is going to use it unsafely and telling them the safest way to use it unsafely.
A good lawyer could turn that around.

Edited to add: Retailers have been sued many time when their customer are injured or injure someone even when they miss used the product and
the retailer had no way of knowing that it was going to be miss-used
 
Not really the same thing, it's a custom made product and the customer told them how it is being used and asking advice of the best way to mount it.
It's more like making a custom gun for someone that you know is going to use it unsafely and telling them the safest way to use it unsafely.
A good lawyer could turn that around.


I suppose you could flip it that way. People accidentally shoot themselves with guns all the time and Smith and Wesson isn't paying for it.
 
Top