I wouldn't chance that...... a clothes line pulley attached to one of the trusses should do the trick. ...
Well I wouldn't imagine there's gold bars going up and down the stairs, I am assuming its kids toys, books etc which can be more awkward than very heavy so I wouldn't think there would be too much strain on the trusses. Maybe I might be wrong and if so please ignore my suggestion. Is there anyone comes from an engineering backround???I wouldn't chance that...
When you say we, I assume there is more than one of ye. Why don't you just half fill the boxes and then the second person can hand up the contents of the other half while the person in the attic refills the box.
If they're that heavy hope where you are siting them can take the weight also.
We are regularly lifting heavy plastic boxes up and down from the attic and already back injuries have occured as a result. Wondering if theres any solution - like a pulley system or something? We have a Stira ladder not a proper stairs. Thanks.
I hope the beams in your attic are reinforced enough to take the load of storing boxes that cannot easily be lifted into the attic! Don't put them above any beds below maybe!We are regularly lifting heavy plastic boxes up and down from the attic and already back injuries have occured as a result. Wondering if theres any solution - like a pulley system or something? We have a Stira ladder not a proper stairs. Thanks.
I hope the beams in your attic are reinforced enough to take the load of storing boxes that cannot easily be lifted into the attic! Don't put them above any beds below maybe!
Surely the attic floor must be strong enough to have people walking on it and these boxes are certainly not that heavy
just done a little search in repentance for my dodgy advice and found that stira has a new product comming soon which looks like it could solve all your problems [broken link removed]Dont think there's a specific one but a clothes line pulley attached to one of the trusses
I wouldn't bank on it. At least not without knowing the load capacity of the beams and the weight of the boxes in question. Obviously spreading the load across several beams using boards will help but attic beams are simply not normally made for bearing heavy loads long term.As long as the boxes aren't placed directly on the plasterboard, there should be no problem.
I'm not trying to be a "know it all" or anything but in fairness a few boxes in the attic is not going to cause any damage once they are placed on those relatively cheap tongued and grooved panels specifically designed for attics. I've had bookshelves and several boxes in my attic for years and never had a problem.I wouldn't bank on it. At least not without knowing the load capacity of the beams and the weight of the boxes in question. Obviously spreading the load across several beams using boards will help but attic beams are simply not normally made for bearing heavy loads long term.
As I said - it depends on the beams and the load involved. I can't tell these from the posts to date so I would certainly err on the side of caution.I'm not trying to be a "know it all" or anything but in fairness a few boxes in the attic is not going to cause any damage once they are placed on those relatively cheap tongued and grooved panels specifically designed for attics. I've had bookshelves and several boxes in my attic for years and never had a problem.
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