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Poor Mans Storage Lift

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Lassen Forge

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2014
Messages
15,115
Location
The romantic hills of central Umbria, Italy,
Thinking about this... full drum is 495 lbs - more if it's something other than water. We've stacked full ones on top of other full ones in a semi hauling hazmat (iirc the heaviest drum we had was upwards of 600 lbs). As long as the sides have never been compromised it holds up fine. Just don't tap them with a hammer, tho. We had a pallet jack handle come undone from it's mooring and hit the side of one of the barrels...

Be glad y ou didn't have to clean up that mess.

Triple that? Ummm... well, it's your truck and your ****. Risk is in the (missing) eye of the beholder.
 

HotrodHR

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 22, 2009
Messages
445
Location
North Alabama
https://www.iopp.org/files/public/Alert_15-03_Steel_Drum_Stacking_Considerations.pdf

With a little searching per the International Steel Drum Institute (no, I didn't make that up) 55 gallon drums are specced for 4 high stacking filled with a material up to 1.5x specific gravity (weight of water) and 3 high if over 1.5x

So, the weight of water 8.34lbs x 3 = 1376lbs x 1.5 = 2,064lbs.

Carry on sir.

Not sure where you came up with the weight... There's 8.34 lbs, per gallon of water, so 55 gallons would be 458.7 lbs, plus weight of barrel."
 

bradpac

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 8, 2013
Messages
721
Location
Central TX
Not sure where you came up with the weight... There's 8.34 lbs, per gallon of water, so 55 gallons would be 458.7 lbs, plus weight of barrel."

8.43 x 55 = 458.7 x 3 = 1376, sorry I didn't show all my work, in my mind the 55 was a given so I forgot to type it, my teachers hated me too.
I also left out the weight of the barrel for simplicity.
 

boatshoes

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
126
Location
Atlanta
The weight calculations are only relevant if the barrels are filled to prevent collapse. Empty barrels are subject to buckling and catastrophic failure; if they're full, the incompressible liquid inside resists the wall deformation that leads to buckling.

^^^This is everything
 

Justintime2

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 26, 2019
Messages
97
Location
PNW
Decisions like this, although creative, are why I earn a living. Well intentioned but bad idea...
 

ksgar

Active member
Joined
Nov 30, 2016
Messages
26
I still remember pulling army reserve duty as a medic one Saturday afternoon back in the 70's in the local hospital. My commanding officer ushered me into one of the ER rooms and pulled the sheet off of the young man that had a car fall on him while he was working underneath it.His face and shoulders looked fine but his torso through his pelvis was a deep purple. The picture is still etched in my mind. That incident, and others, has made me somewhat risk adverse. The OP seems to be a risk seeker. Good luck to you sir.
 

JRC3

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Joined
Jun 30, 2014
Messages
12,481
Location
Southwestern OH
Ima guess the truck will be up there for a year+...The mowers need used weekly in season.

I think it's not so much about storage of mowers and a tad more about intermittent work on the Ram. That type work seems like it could become complacent and that's were bad things could happen. IDK. All I know is, NIMG (not in my garage).
 

JRC3

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Joined
Jun 30, 2014
Messages
12,481
Location
Southwestern OH
Personally I'd fill 'em with sand.

So how much would that cost?

That would be 7.35 cu. ft. per BBL. 955lbs. Bagged sand from HD would cost $63 per BBL. Bagged sand is too expensive so lets say buying it by the ton or half scoop. Lets say that cost $15 for a half yard. Plus driving there for loading and then unloading by hand. One 1500 pickup truck should hold enough for one BBL, that 4 trips total. Then, again, there's loading each BBL and moving it afterwards. How the heck do you even move it???

Add that to truck gas, labor, mess, mobility of finished product, the risk of everything from pickup truck sand and moving the BBLs...That cost about the same as the 4) 10 ton stands I posted.

OK, I'm done with my beer fueled mini rant. :lol_hitti



To me, this is like the PVC airline discussions. ;)
 
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p00p

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Joined
Nov 23, 2019
Messages
1,997
Location
42.4974° N, 82.8964° W
put smaller steel drums inside the larger drums. If the largest drum fatigues, it'll at least not allow the entire load drop down fully while also providing a seeable warning requiring attention.
 

JRC3

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 30, 2014
Messages
12,481
Location
Southwestern OH
put smaller steel drums inside the larger drums. If the largest drum fatigues, it'll at least not allow the entire load drop down fully while also providing a seeable warning requiring attention.

Is your "location" like your exact house?
 

Rewind97

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 15, 2013
Messages
1,549
Location
Mississippi
Take a 6 x 6 post cut to same length as barrel then make some frames to keep it centered in the barrel. Just a thought.
 

TractorJeff

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 8, 2013
Messages
3,309
Location
Elkhorn, WI
Go to a Fishing Town, you will see Fishing Boats sitting with 55 gal barrels keeping the Boat upright. They are heavier than that Truck!
 
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