lix
Beginner
I use an electric hoist, it's in a position where I can lift monitors up to my mezzanine area for storage but I can use it to take monitors out of cabs and drop them onto a trolly.
Sounds rough—hope the rehab goes well for you. Feel better soon.While rotating an Astro I ripped my bicep muscle into my armpit and had to have surgery end of last month.
That’s what I do, put a Windy on its back and lifted out the monitor just a day ago. If doing on your own it’s the only way. I have done it with the following cabs, Neo29, Capcom Impress, Aero city and now a Windy.Sounds rough—hope the rehab goes well for you. Feel better soon.
I’ve heard of people laying the entire cab on its “back” to rotate the monitor. Still a two-person job but seems easier on one’s body and less of a chance of damaging the tube.
A hoist seems ideal for those who have the space for it.
This is the terrifying part. More so than the fear of re-injuring my back.The frameless monitors like the Impress need doing flat or you risk catching the neck and snapping it off.
This is an old thread but curious if you found a solution that worked well for you?Thanks I have been.
heres my story:
I own a hydroponic store that sells over 300 pallets of dirt a year.
Just helping customers can mean benching over a ton of weight per day if they're not flatbed customers.
I throw my back out once a year and am worthless for a week during recovery and then weak for another month.
I got hit by a car in 4th grade and have some real issues going on.
I can and have been lifting safely but I'm really looking forward to a process that I can depend on that does not having me bent over my cab lifting my monitors out.
I have nothing against people that don't mind doing it themselves but I abused my back over my lifetime so far and am looking forward to testing this thing.
I have Kenny coming in to design my chain array. We'll see how it goes
No. The engine hoist was unwieldy and very slow. I would buy a scissor lift over that and just slide the monitor off its mount directly onto the lift table.This is an old thread but curious if you found a solution that worked well for you?
I'm not getting any younger and after having various incidents with lifting heavy objects, preserving the somewhat usable back I have is top of mind.
I've been looking into the latest exoskeleton suits meant to prevent injuries in manual labor and am wondering if that's a potential solution. From what I've seen they can potentially take 20 or more pounds of pressure off of the user for specific muscle groups. I'm thinking of things like HeroWear Apex 2. They still aren't accessibly cheap, but they're less than you'll find for an aero table and could save you a lot more in medical bills.
Ok cool. I was actually looking at some scissor lifts. Seem like they'd be best option for usability/maneuverability.No. The engine hoist was unwieldy and very slow. I would buy a scissor lift over that and just slide the monitor off its mount directly onto the lift table.
I use a rolling tool chest I bought from Home Depot for $160 on sale. It takes most of the burden but I would love to own that table lift:
https://www.uline.com/Product/Detai...E6JmjsiiVmO4-3LH-VxZgnoN5k9_r4PBoCzxMQAvD_BwE