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Topic Review (Newest First)

  • 08-07-2005, 10:04 PM
    spotts

    Most major malls have a "LadRestorer"

    Right between the "Leftorium" and the "Scotch Tape Boutique"
  • 08-07-2005, 03:15 PM
    amickracing
    I could have sworn I read on this site (a year or more ago) about someone who had thier ladders re-coated every few years. This wasn't really a fix for a bad ladder, but more of a maintenence thing to keep this from happening.
  • 08-07-2005, 12:49 PM
    icemeister

    Lusker.........don't be a cheap SOB

    Before that relic mames or kills somebody cut it up......or give it to your brother-in-law

    You can get a brand new one for around a hundred bucks or so.

    http://www.wernerladder.com/catalog/...?series_id=128
  • 08-07-2005, 12:02 PM
    neophytes serendipity
    Originally posted by lusker
    Since I am too vain to read a ladder website...

    Anyone know how to keep an old yellow fiberglass ladder from sheading fiberglass into your body?

    Any special treatments?

    I have one that is around 13 years old... great ladder, but everytime your arm or leg bumps it you get fiberglass in you.

    thanks
    Could be an old wives tale, but I have heard that the UV damages fiberglass ladders that are left outdoors.

    The fibers that are coming off means it is possible that the ladder is unsafe to use. The UV damage could be deeper than just the surface. Composites do not fail slowly, they fail catastrophically, often without warning. Fibers being released is proof that the outer resin coating has failed.

    I do know that any type of concealing treatment, such as paint or tape on a ladder, violates OSHA regulations. The paint/tape hides damage. Your ladder, your fines.

    If it was me, I would destroy it and buy a nice new US made one. Lot cheaper than going down the hard way.
  • 08-07-2005, 11:08 AM
    spotts
    Go see the "paint guy" at your fav. auto parts dealer. Get some fiberglass resin, take it apart, and re-seal the fibers in your ladder like they were when it was new. Easy easy. You put wax on that thing, the fibers will still be there but resin will never stick. You'll ruin it.
  • 08-06-2005, 05:47 PM
    secorp
    Originally posted by NedFlanders
    Originally posted by condenseddave
    Originally posted by NedFlanders
    wrap it in duct tape
    LMFAO. And set it in the sun....
    Yea , the sun will make it flow.
    The you can peel the tape off and there will me a nice new "safety" coating on it.

    I bet your tools will even stick to the sides then.

    If we all put our heads together , we are a very powerful bunch.

    Don't forget to use Armaflex glue or it will not work.

  • 08-06-2005, 05:45 PM
    Senior Tech
  • 08-06-2005, 05:39 PM
    James 3528
    Originally posted by lusker
    James... our average guy, including me, is 210# + without tools. We have all red fiberglass now... it is just the yellow one that has been around so long. Darn good ladder still.

    Maybe I can coat it again, but I really like the car wax idea.

    Get a 55 gallon drum of this and dip the ladder

  • 08-06-2005, 05:24 PM
    Dad
    James... our average guy, including me, is 210# + without tools. We have all red fiberglass now... it is just the yellow one that has been around so long. Darn good ladder still.

    Maybe I can coat it again, but I really like the car wax idea.

  • 08-06-2005, 05:15 PM
    James 3528
    In use to worry about conductivity with ladders until I realized the several times a year I got hooked up and shocked good, I was not on a ladder. Then I thought about how many times I had done electrical work right off of a extension ladder an that came out to be a whopping zero times. That was when I bought a medium height lite weight aluminum extension ladder and I love it.
  • 08-06-2005, 04:49 PM
    R12rules
    almost anything you coated it with would be non conductive. What constitutes conductivity is something which provides a path to ground, electrically.

    anything applied with a paint brush or sprayed on would probably NOT conduct electricity.

    Originally, the outer coating was fiberglass resin. Why not just buy some resin and re-apply it over the channels of your ladder?
  • 08-06-2005, 03:57 PM
    NedFlanders
    Originally posted by condenseddave
    Originally posted by NedFlanders
    wrap it in duct tape
    LMFAO. And set it in the sun....
    Yea , the sun will make it flow.
    The you can peel the tape off and there will me a nice new "safety" coating on it.

    I bet your tools will even stick to the sides then.

    If we all put our heads together , we are a very powerful bunch.
  • 08-06-2005, 03:35 PM
    James 3528
    Originally posted by lusker
    Since I am too vain to read a ladder website...

    Anyone know how to keep an old yellow fiberglass ladder from sheading fiberglass into your body?

    Any special treatments?

    I have one that is around 13 years old... great ladder, but everytime your arm or leg bumps it you get fiberglass in you.

    thanks
    I know you hate to get rid of it. But do what I did, run over it with the van. When I bought a new one I also bout a aluminum one that went up 16 feet and I use that one more than the fiberglass one and it is a lot less weight .
  • 08-06-2005, 02:56 PM
    condenseddave
    Originally posted by NedFlanders
    wrap it in duct tape
    LMFAO. And set it in the sun....
  • 08-06-2005, 02:55 PM
    condenseddave
    Originally posted by lusker
    One of the guys told me car paste wax ?
    Oh, that'll make it safe. What did you do to piss him off?????

    I have a 15 y/o 28' that is doing the same thing. I'm thinking Sawzall, dumpster, Grainger....
  • 08-06-2005, 01:39 PM
    ct2
    walk away from it for 5 minutes on a job site....someone will come by and fix it for you
  • 08-06-2005, 12:24 PM
    cracker
    Mr Rep....How Is It Going...Did You Get The Info I Sent....E Mail Me And let Me Know.
  • 08-06-2005, 11:39 AM
    Dad
    Originally posted by dec
    Better send it to me and go out and buy yourself a new one. You dont want to risk using it and by giving it to me you can be assured that you will no longer have fiberglass problems. You might want to try some of the other guys fixes before you send it to me.....you sure wouldnt want me sueing you, would you.
    It would be worth it if you accidently sat on it.

  • 08-06-2005, 11:32 AM
    dec
    Better send it to me and go out and buy yourself a new one. You dont want to risk using it and by giving it to me you can be assured that you will no longer have fiberglass problems. You might want to try some of the other guys fixes before you send it to me.....you sure wouldnt want me sueing you, would you.
  • 08-06-2005, 11:11 AM
    Dad
    Originally posted by NedFlanders
    wrap it in duct tape
    thanks Ned... I can always count on you.
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