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counterweight for trap door

rieferman

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May 18, 2009
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2,586
Location
Collegeville PA (30 min west of Philly)
I have a few ideas in mind but always like to hear creative ideas... Building a trap door at the top of the barn steps. It's 4 feet wide x 8 feet long... so it's heavy. I have the pulleys etc. for a counterweight system.

So, what would you use for a counterweight?
 
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BWS

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Sep 3, 2006
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923
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Mnts of Va
Quikcrete in a sheetrock dope bucket,drop an eye hook in......once cured,flip it to empty......or.......go steal some kids dumbell weights,keep adding till you get the weight....or.....Fred Flinstone(think bigazz rock).......or.........springs with articulated arm(think pulldown attic doors).Good luck,BW
 

larry4406

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Jan 27, 2006
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19,564
Location
Northern Virginia
Use a length of 4 inch pvc pipe with end caps. Drill one end cap, insert an eye hook, add coupling nuts and more threaded rod. Along the length of the threaded rod, have a nut a large washer and another nut. Repeat the nut/washer/nut a few times. Fill with concrete. The concrete will grip the washers preventing pullout.

Determine how much counter weight you need to counter balance your door, use the density of concrete to find out how much you need, then size the pipe length accordingly.
 

Tyrol67

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Joined
Sep 16, 2008
Messages
39
Location
Rochester, NY
A friend used Larry's idea but also put the PVC weight into another PVC pipe. It was a snug fit so it almost acted like a pneumatic cylinder offering some dampening on open and close. He also hid the weight inside of a wall. The system was used To drop a full stairway from the loft. Worked great. Key is getting the right weight. Those stairs dropped or raised with minimal force and then travelled very smoothly due to the dampening. He may have put a small hole in either end of the outer tube to contol the air release. I am also doing a trap door but I expect it be lighter, so I am going to try some gas springs first.
 
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akdiesel

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Aug 8, 2008
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2,617
Location
Wasilla, AK
You could use the springs that are used for tilt trailers, and adjust them for just the right tension.
 

tcianci

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Feb 7, 2009
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4,242
Location
Walpole, Ma
I did one once and just welded up a couple of arms that bolted to the door and extended beyond the pivot point. I bolted concrete blocks to the arms. It worked out great and the customer liked it because it had no moving parts, cables or links. The building inspector liked it too, which was my biggest concern/
 
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rieferman

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Joined
May 18, 2009
Messages
2,586
Location
Collegeville PA (30 min west of Philly)
Hey guys,
Thanks for all the ideas. I ended up using weight lifting weights as my temporary solution. I liked this because it allowed me to exactly match both sets of weights, and also easily quantify how much weight I needed. Now that I know the door opens and closes very easily and smoothly, I will go ahead and do something a bit nicer that can be hidden behind a finished wall at a later date.
 

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