This is what we do

Engineering students, that is. We build things.

In this particular case, I built a crane to hoist an old swamp cooler down off the roof and then hoist the new cooler up.  Anna and I did the whole thing ourselves.

Warning!  Don’t try this at YOUR home!  Lifting large loads high over your head is dangerous.  You could kill someone, or smash a hole in your wall or roof, or drop and break something very expensive.  Possibly all three.

The crane, undergoing tests

The crane, undergoing tests

attachment detail

attachment detail

Old cooler ready for lowering

Old cooler ready for lowering

New cooler ready for raising

New cooler ready for raising

The operator at the winch

The operator at the winch

The cooler on its way up

The cooler on its way up

New swamp cooler on the roof

New swamp cooler on the roof

In the back yard, there was a hand truck fastened to a ladder with hose clamps, braced against the side of the house.

On the ridge of the roof, I built a little platform with a winch on it, and tied the platform to our car (parked in the front yard) so the load wouldn’t drag the operator over the roof and into the back yard.

The operator cranks the winch, and the ladder lifts the load (safely strapped on to the hand truck) into the air.  The hand truck is placed such that when the ladder is cranked up against the roof, the load is just above the surface of the roof.

First we lowered the rusted-out cooler into the back yard, to test everything.  It worked fine, but the attachment point I chose put too much bending stress on the ladder.  After fixing that, we loaded the new cooler on the hand truck, strapped it down with a ratchet strap, and Anna started turning the crank.  It rose into the air like magic.

When it was about four feet in the air, it suddenly shifted.  The base of the ladder was no longer level.  I had Anna lower it to the ground again and did some leveling and chocking.  It seemed to do the trick.

Were I to do this again, I’d use guy wires to keep the ladder from tipping or twisting.  The wires would run from the top of the ladder to stakes pounded into the ground at the base of the house.  Or possibly to a couple of large friends.

I was extremely pleased with how well it worked, and relieved that we didn’t break anything.

About Doug

I grew up an Air Force brat and have visited every European country except those once behind the Iron Curtain (they wouldn't let my father in for some reason). Now I'm enrolled in the Aerospace Engineering program at NMSU in Las Cruces, NM.
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2 Responses to This is what we do

  1. Don Nichols says:

    Hello Mr. Weathers! Dang, think how much easier the project would have been with Vince Guinee’s help!

    I stumbled onto two certifiably gawd-awful Tom Swiftys which I thought my elicit a very satisfying groan.

    “I know EVERYTHING about gun safety,” said Tom, once again, unfortunately, shooting his mouth off.”

    “Look, I’ve created an invisible jet,” Tom said as if it were plain to see.

    Merry Christmas! Well, once you’ve recovered anyway. . .

  2. Jay says:

    I love it Doug, ‘cept that’s the kinda engineering that u don’t need so much skooling for! Good to see the wife put to work.. Personally, I wouldn’t have been able to resist labeling that photo as “wench on a winch”.
    No updates yet, but I’m gonna be driving the Ghia EV this spring, yeah, I really mean it this time!
    Best to you and Anna,
    -Jay

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