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Pallet rack question

dante2

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Dec 27, 2011
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500
Location
Central OK
I'm planning on going with a set of rack about 23' long and 48" wide. Planning on 2 8' uprights on the ends and a 10' in the middle. Future plans to add some type of lift for loads under 150# working off the middle rack. All that being said would it be good idea to secure the uprights in the back, both front and back, or not at all?
 
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LXCam

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Apr 23, 2013
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AZ
You're wanting to mount a hoist/winch off the vertical upright ?

Calling @LXCam I believe he did something similar last year.
Oh ya fine Eric, toss me under the bus will ya 😉🤣

Op, Eric’s correct I did. But my configuration is totally different than your application. For you at a minimum you need to anchor the rear feet if not all of them. Even at 4ft deep a cantilevered load 2ft out with enough weight to counter act the weight of the rack could tip it over on you.

Id also suggest not attaching it to the upright if that’s the plan. Having it mounted in shear will put inwards force at the bottom mount into the upright channel and these things aren’t engineered for it.

I don’t suggest anyone follow my example but this will give you some idea of how I pulled off such stupidity.

 
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dante2

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Dec 27, 2011
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Location
Central OK
Good advice everyone and thank you. LXCam if my ceiling were taller I would definitely be using your idea. Maybe the engine hoist forklift is a better option at this point.
 

FTG-05

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Oct 11, 2012
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TN
I'd probably drill some holes and bolt the beams to the upright to make sure nothing tries to uplift and disconnect. . . . and use atleast some grade 5 hardware.
Shouldn't need to drill holes; but it may depend on specifically which pallet rack design is being used. When I made my pallet rack workbench years ago, there were 2 holes that I used for each upright/beam joint to make the bench solid as heck. You can see the two 3/8" bolts and nuts here. No drilling involved.

IMG_3464 (Large).jpeg
 
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dante2

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Dec 27, 2011
Messages
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Location
Central OK
I looked into the truck crane some more and I think I can use the compact version that fits under the bed rail. Not lifting anything very heavy and I have a hydraulic lift cart that lifts just over 4' so I have to lift half the distance. Since this is going to see minimal use l'm cheaping out and going to use a hand crank boat winch. I'm thinking that bolting center upright front and back and the backs on the outside uprights will be enough. Any thoughts good or bad? Suggestions on anchors?
 
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TurnipTruck

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Aug 28, 2005
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Southcentral Alaska
The racking that I am familiar with uses 6” long Hilti brand anchors, using four per upright (assuming on concrete). The beams are retained to the uprights with ~6” long carriage bolts in existing square holes parallel to the beams.
If all of your uprights were the same excess height, you could bolt on a sloped roof above your crane.


-this is a poor picture of the junk-filled roofed racking I left at the old shop-
IMG_0054.png
 
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nadogail

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Jan 23, 2009
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Location
Coronado, CA
Keep in mind that Earthquakes happen, and when loaded racks begin swinging the added Seismic Supports will save your day.
 

ATC

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May 12, 2012
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VA
Keep in mind that Earthquakes happen, and when loaded racks begin swinging the added Seismic Supports will save your day.

I think the OP being in Oklahoma probably needs tornado-rated supports before earthquake rated ones :badteeth:
 
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dante2

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Messages
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Location
Central OK
We do get them here occasionally but they are mostly under a 3. I lived 20 years in Northern California and never experienced an earthquake until I lived in Oklahoma.
 

rust in the eye

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Chicagoland
I'm planning on going with a set of rack about 23' long and 48" wide. Planning on 2 8' uprights on the ends and a 10' in the middle. Future plans to add some type of lift for loads under 150# working off the middle rack. All that being said would it be good idea to secure the uprights in the back, both front and back, or not at all?
Are you imagining a davit crane? I thought of this myself on my racks but decided not to for a bunch of reasons. First is these all clip together and applying loads in a direction they weren't designed to accept seemed dangerous. Bolting could mitigate this but then faced with a cantilevered load (my racks are 12'h x 42 deep) the possibility of tipping becomes a factor. I suppose if ballasted enough this would be a non issue.
My use would be for heavier items, engines transmissions, etc. I'd find it hard if having such a device to limit it's use to lighter items.
I may reconfigure mine leaving a section out of the middle and attaching a bridge across the span to accept a crane. This would only apply downward loading as these are intended for. Maybe this could work for you.
 
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dante2

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 27, 2011
Messages
500
Location
Central OK
Are you imagining a davit crane? I thought of this myself on my racks but decided not to for a bunch of reasons. First is these all clip together and applying loads in a direction they weren't designed to accept seemed dangerous. Bolting could mitigate this but then faced with a cantilevered load (my racks are 12'h x 42 deep) the possibility of tipping becomes a factor. I suppose if ballasted enough this would be a non issue.
My use would be for heavier items, engines transmissions, etc. I'd find it hard if having such a device to limit it's use to lighter items.
I may reconfigure mine leaving a section out of the middle and attaching a bridge across the span to accept a crane. This would only apply downward loading as these are intended for. Maybe this could work for you.
The crane setup that LXCam has is looking like a winner but I'm looking at the smaller version. My walls are 10' so not a lot of room for a tall crane under the ridge.
 

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