mello
- 107
- 43
nice, that's perfect for a few hoods on each, maybe overkill for my bare bulb thing.Check out www.garagegator.com for some very interesting lifts that some are adapting to their gardens for ease of light adjustment.
I used the hand crank gator and it works great. Make for ease of use and not have to lug a ladder in the room to raise and lower the lights. I mounted my lights to a c channel that is used in commercial electrical and then hooked the gator to that.
I am using adjust a wings.
back hurts from hunching over eh? now teach us a good diy :eek:Dude you guys are awesome. Thanks so much.
My gig is engineered to function the whole time with the reflectors at the height that they currently are at. No raising and lowering for me.back hurts from hunching over eh? now teach us a good diy :eek:
Careful, use of the word catwalk can lead to Right Said Fred jokes.i need a hydraulic catwalk down my middle row
pretty much what I was thinking, thanks!This is what I would consider your best option. This is how theatrical rigging works. The lights would be hung on the pipe (part #4), and the pipe moves up and down, moving all your lights at the same time at the same height.
This is what I would consider your best option. This is how theatrical rigging works. The lights would be hung on the pipe (part #4), and the pipe moves up and down, moving all your lights at the same time at the same height.
At 75 bucks for the hand crank version of the gator lift i dont think i could put together the parts as cheap let alone engineer it.One lift per 2 1000s sounds about right but you could hang alot more if you lengthened the bar and used lighter weight reflectors like the a-wings ill be using.
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