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Mahogany species


ucoulddoit
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1 hour ago, nepia said:

A lack of locking mechanism in the open position?  Wildly guessing here as no-one else has

That was one of the details which took a while to sort out as it wasn't obvious from pictures on the internet. As well as the legs spreading apart, I realised the top step might flip up, like a see saw if someone stood on the front edge. Photo below ( a bit blurry) shows the L shaped grooves for the brass rod at the back of the top step.

 

1722737024_IMG_1738(2).thumb.JPG.e57728f4e57622a0782a86e4d594ae1d.JPG

 

Fingers crossed, that seems OK. But I might recess a couple of 3mm brass plates around the bottom of the groove as the brass rod will wear the wood over time.

 

Andrew

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1 hour ago, ucoulddoit said:

Surprised no one has figured out the design flaw. To narrow it down, it’s the top folding step / platform. I’ve tried to fix the design flaw, but what did I get wrong? Answer tomorrow if no one gets to it first.

 

Andrew

To be fair, the reward was perhaps a little meagre!

 

 The next design flaw should offer at least a load of highly valuable Walnut logs as an incentive.

Edited by Squaredy
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1 hour ago, Doug Tait said:

I've looked and wondered for a 3rd evening in a row and cannot see a design flaw, look forward to tomorrow when you end the suspense.

 

They are a lovely looking step though, whatever the flaw turns out to be.

I agree. I can only see tiny quibbles not design flaws.

The workmanship is top notch and to add any safety details would distract from the timber quality - so I hesitate even mentioning these:

1. strap to prevent the ladder splaying under load

2. non-slip feet (rubber)

3. non-slip top shelf

4. it might be that the back of the ladder stands a bit vertical, may I respectfully  suggest that the user adopt a lower centre of gravity when using it 😅

 

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8 hours ago, Sutton said:

I agree. I can only see tiny quibbles not design flaws.

The workmanship is top notch and to add any safety details would distract from the timber quality - so I hesitate even mentioning these:

1. strap to prevent the ladder splaying under load

2. non-slip feet (rubber)

3. non-slip top shelf

4. it might be that the back of the ladder stands a bit vertical, may I respectfully  suggest that the user adopt a lower centre of gravity when using it 😅

 

All good comments, but not what concerns me. I hope the brass bars supporting the top platform and attached to the legs are enough to prevent them splaying under load. That’s how it was done on the one I more or less copied from a photo on the internet. 

Now wondering if it’s a construction flaw, not design, as I now realise the mistake goes back to when I selected the timber for the platform? Just to confuse everyone even more.
 

Andrew
 

 

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