|
Posted by 3rd eye on July 31, 2005, 11:18 pm
On Sun, 31 Jul 2005 17:15:04 -0400, "Charlie Bress"
>Among other things, ladders are rated by the weight they can safely hold.
>The following copied from a web page.
> a.. Type III, Light Duty / Household Use (200 pound load capacity): The
>lightest rating, intended for short ladders that will be used very
>infrequently and for very light-duty work.
As you said. Short ladder.
Based on what I've seen of type III ladders, I'd never climb a fully
extended 40'er.
Like to think they don't make em.
> b.. Type II, Medium Duty, Commercial Use (225 pound load capacity): For
>light duty use around the house -- painting, cleaning, light repairs.
> c.. Type I, Heavy Duty, Industrial Use (250 pound load capacity): Good all
>around rating for household or commercial use. Sturdy enough for just about
>any use.
> d.. Type IA, Extra Heavy Duty/Professional Use (300 pound load capacity):
>The highest rating. Very sturdy, and designed for rugged use in any capacity
>on commercial or industrial sites.
<snip>
Yea & the heavier duty they are the harder they are to lug around.
>>>>
>>>> My neighbor has an old 40 foot aluminum extension ladder that he has
>>>> stored for a number of years in his garage. He has offered to sell it
>>>> to me if I want it. My question is this: Assuming I have to replace
>>>> the ropes, what would a fair price be for a used ladder of this size?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
|