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STARTS ON THE GROUND
(3083 views)
Bring Junior in first and start the wall right off the scaffold. The walkboards are ready to drop in place when you get scaffold-high. March 20, 2008
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ROOM TO MOVE
(3267 views)
Even stocked full of material, Junior's 4 boards on the back leave room enough for the men to move around. March 20, 2008
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NOT JUST FOR SMALL JOBS
(3574 views)
While Junior is ideal in a residential setting, it's equally at home on commercial jobs like this apartment complex. In fact, it's rated for jobs up to 80 feet high. March 20, 2008
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LOAD IT UP, JUNIOR CAN TAKE IT
(3386 views)
Junior has plenty of cranking power. Stocking the material ahead leaves the tenders free to do other tasks. The masons never have to wait. March 20, 2008
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STARTS ON THE GROUND, PART II
(3382 views)
After the wall gets scaffold high, the walkboards, which were stored under the work bench, drop into place and the masons continue laying brick. Since the scaffold was set in place before the first brick was, the crew doesn't move to another wall, only to run it scaffold high, too. March 20, 2008
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Laborers Platform on Standard
(2823 views)
The laborers' side of the Standard scaffold has plenty of walking room.
You can add 2 cut boards to every open bay for material landing and
stocking. May 26, 2009
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Laborer Cranking Standard
(2681 views)
The winch is exactly the right height for easy cranking. The double
gear reduction combined with the rollers in the carriage make cranking
an easy job. If the laborers crank every two courses of block, or every
five courses of brick, they will never get behind. And the masons will
never have a backache! May 26, 2009
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