Trestle Ladder

Travisb6989

Member
Location
FL
Occupation
Electrician
Doing more and more high end custom homes with 22’ plus ceilings. So I needed to invest in some different ladders and likely some walk boards.

Curious on the Trestle ladders. Can one climb the extension portion of a trestle ladder, or is that only for holding a walk board?
 
Doing more and more high end custom homes with 22’ plus ceilings. So I needed to invest in some different ladders and likely some walk boards.

Curious on the Trestle ladders. Can one climb the extension portion of a trestle ladder, or is that only for holding a walk board?
not me. they make some nice light weight man lifts that can get in a standard door opening, one option is like this
1745029262555.png
 
I have one. Climbing the extension and working there is good for me, but I had a harness on.
I don’t bounce like I used to. I haven't used it in about 8 years now.

I could work a 16' ceiling, but that's it.
One advantage is the ladder can hold the fixture while I wire it.
 
I have one. Climbing the extension and working there is good for me, but I had a harness on.
I don’t bounce like I used to. I haven't used it in about 8 years now.

I could work a 16' ceiling, but that's it.
One advantage is the ladder can hold the fixture while I wire it.
Is the base just wide as hell- seems like being up that extension part one little shift and thing fall over. Just looks sketchy
 
I have one. Climbing the extension and working there is good for me, but I had a harness on.
I don’t bounce like I used to. I haven't used it in about 8 years now.

I could work a 16' ceiling, but that's it.
One advantage is the ladder can hold the fixture while I wire it.
What would you attach your harness to?
 
I was on a job several years ago and a plumber was using a six-foot ladder and standing on the top step. He slipped and fell, later I found out he became paralyzed from the neck down. Since then, ladders have given me the "Willes".
 
I was on a job several years ago and a plumber was using a six-foot ladder and standing on the top step. He slipped and fell, later I found out he became paralyzed from the neck down. Since then, ladders have given me the "Willes".
The safety guy’s saying is “The top two are not for you”. Many years ago we had a guy remove a brace on a 12’ ladder to get over a merchandise case at a cash register, the ladder collapsed, he fell and broke his neck. He was the owners cousin.
 
What would you attach your harness to?
The ladder itself.
The ladder is unbelievably steady. It’s a wide base ladder.
Now it hangs on my shop ceiling


Well, I can’t get a picture to upload. Keeps
Telling me it’s running into problems

So how much will the server process??
 
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The ladder itself.
The ladder is unbelievably steady. It’s a wide base ladder.
Now it hangs on my shop ceiling


Well, I can’t get a picture to upload. Keeps
Telling me it’s running into problems

So how much will the server process??
IMG_2742.jpeg
 
Anything over a 14' stepladder height (18' or so ceiling) I set up a staging. Not the same one as the one MTW posted, but effectively the same. Staging supports fixtures and tools, also. There was a time in the '80's that 2 of us were up on it, on wheels and no outriggers, at 22' platform height, (planks were at top rung) and we wired about a 10K square foot garage off it. Those days are over. But to hang a chandelier at a residential site we will still do a 22' ceiling easily off of just (3) sections.
 
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