This picture the following day and gives a view form the other angle of these steels in place:
Moving on from the rear, we had to repeat the process of lifting and shifting for the two 254 x 146 RSJs for the front wall, but this was less of a problem because the kitchen/garage wall wasn't in the way so there was too much manoeuvring around that was needed. In fact, they went in so quickly I didn't take any pictures of them going in!
The final RSJ was the one for the garage door and was another beast due to the steel plate on it!
I'd made another mistake at this point by failing to tell my SE that the existing garage pier was only 1 brick (215mm) wide and not 300mm as per the new side. That mean the steel would plate would be too big and I wouldn't be able to accommodate the 100mm cavity that I'd planned for the brickwork on top. Following speaking to the SE it was decided that we'd simply narrow the cavity space to resolve this issue...but that meant me cutting 40mm off 5.2m of 8mm steel.
1.5 hours and 5 x 9" cutting discs later I'd lopped off the extra plate and the RSJ was ready to go in.
Even though this final lift was arguably the easiest to do, the beam seemed really heavy and again it was a real fight to get it in at the right position with good bearing on both ends.
I think the above is the only picture I took of the whole genie lift. Barring the lack of manoeuvrability it was made the actual process of lifting very easy. The thing itself was ruddy heavy (and massive) when assembled, so you do need a bit of space if you're going to use one of these. Here's a screenshot/details of the model:
At this point the weekend was over, and the genie lift had to be returned to the hire company, but it wasn't the end of the RSJ story.
I kept looking at the beam over the garage door opening and it just didn't look quite right to me. Despite having levelled it at the time, something must have happened because it turn out to be quite out of level.
Not wanting to drop another £200 to hire the genie lift again, I did a proper cowboy job with my scaffold tower and 2 x 2 ton hydraulic vehicle jacks. Again, I didn't get too many pictures of this sketch procedure, but basically I had the missus raise the jacks a little bit at a time as I increase the heights of the acros. No only was I able to level up the beam, I also increase the height a bit to accommodate a garage door that I picked up second hand... more on that in a future post.
It wasn't the safest way to to it, but needs must and I was keen to crack on.
So the steels were £1.7k, the hire of the genie lift was £200 and I spent a couple of hundred more on bits and bobs (bolts, steel paint, cutting discs, etc). Therefore, total spend to this point was £25.5k.
Cheers
Andy
Moving on from the rear, we had to repeat the process of lifting and shifting for the two 254 x 146 RSJs for the front wall, but this was less of a problem because the kitchen/garage wall wasn't in the way so there was too much manoeuvring around that was needed. In fact, they went in so quickly I didn't take any pictures of them going in!
The final RSJ was the one for the garage door and was another beast due to the steel plate on it!
I'd made another mistake at this point by failing to tell my SE that the existing garage pier was only 1 brick (215mm) wide and not 300mm as per the new side. That mean the steel would plate would be too big and I wouldn't be able to accommodate the 100mm cavity that I'd planned for the brickwork on top. Following speaking to the SE it was decided that we'd simply narrow the cavity space to resolve this issue...but that meant me cutting 40mm off 5.2m of 8mm steel.
1.5 hours and 5 x 9" cutting discs later I'd lopped off the extra plate and the RSJ was ready to go in.
Even though this final lift was arguably the easiest to do, the beam seemed really heavy and again it was a real fight to get it in at the right position with good bearing on both ends.
I think the above is the only picture I took of the whole genie lift. Barring the lack of manoeuvrability it was made the actual process of lifting very easy. The thing itself was ruddy heavy (and massive) when assembled, so you do need a bit of space if you're going to use one of these. Here's a screenshot/details of the model:
At this point the weekend was over, and the genie lift had to be returned to the hire company, but it wasn't the end of the RSJ story.
I kept looking at the beam over the garage door opening and it just didn't look quite right to me. Despite having levelled it at the time, something must have happened because it turn out to be quite out of level.
Not wanting to drop another £200 to hire the genie lift again, I did a proper cowboy job with my scaffold tower and 2 x 2 ton hydraulic vehicle jacks. Again, I didn't get too many pictures of this sketch procedure, but basically I had the missus raise the jacks a little bit at a time as I increase the heights of the acros. No only was I able to level up the beam, I also increase the height a bit to accommodate a garage door that I picked up second hand... more on that in a future post.
It wasn't the safest way to to it, but needs must and I was keen to crack on.
So the steels were £1.7k, the hire of the genie lift was £200 and I spent a couple of hundred more on bits and bobs (bolts, steel paint, cutting discs, etc). Therefore, total spend to this point was £25.5k.
Cheers
Andy
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