unspooler project

Does not work well at all- reel wants to roll at the rate the rim of the reel is going, but the pipe pays out at a considerable lag because it's smaller diameter than the part on the ground. Uncooperative (and 2500 lbs of uncooperative can get to killing in short order....not to mention that it will fall in and wedge in the trench.

Reply to
Ecnerwal
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Or even big C clamps if the pipe length just spans the forks so you can stick the C in the end of the pipe and clamp it to the fork.

REPLY"

2500# is not a lot. Most car hauler trailers will haul 2-3x that. Just build a couple triangle supports for each side with a 1/2 hub to accept a large diameter pipe. Near the size of the hole in the spool. The height would only be about 5' for a 9' spool. Put the pipe through the hub, lay the pipe in the 1/2 hub. Like a pipe cut in 1/2 and bolt through the pipe and hub. That will hold the upper part of the triangle from spreading, and have a couple of angle pieces bolted across the bottom. Be similar to the commercial trucks/ trailers. Then tow the trailer with any capable vehicle. You could get an older boat trailer someone is scrapping even.
Reply to
Califbill

Yeah - I was hoping with the winkie-smiley, I could forego the tag. ;-)

Thanks! Rich

Reply to
Rich Grise

Or go rolling down a hill and kill someone.

Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

The trailer we used there was single reel and had a hydraulic tilt mechanism on the reel holder so you could roll the reel over, put the axle through and lock it onto the lift and it would lift it up and into the trailer to the parked position. Several miles of fiber optic cable per reel.

Reply to
Pete C.

Except you need to forklift to load the reals on such a trailer, so you may as well just use the forklift to hold them if you have it anyway.

Reply to
Pete C.

Ours didn't have hydrolyics. Four men rolled the spool of coax up the ramp and used comealongs to pull the axle up the mounts. This was in the early '80s and the trailers were from the mid '70s. There were usually dozens of construction workers on a job when a new cable system was being built so they weren't worried about enough manpower. By the time I ended up on that system it was 99% built. That just left extensions and repairs

Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

And I just checked CraigsList; I don't see any cheap trailers in Bend or the Bay area. Either my searching is poor, or someone was there already.

The big issue with a separate tripod is we'd need to move it frequently, over bad terrain.

My alterative was something on the 3-point hitch, but then I realized it was a bit too heavy....

Reply to
David Lesher

We don't have same; people cost $ so if I can leverage the machines, I will.

Reply to
David Lesher

Times change, and the scale of the job has an impact. When you have a dozen spools leaving the compound every morning it meant that you had dozens of people at hand. Also, hardline is easy to damage on the spool. Drop one over on it's side and it will no longer pass the sweep test. Then you had very expensive rolls of hard to dispose of scrap.

Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

Get a piece of rectangular tubing to fit over one of the forks. Get a piece of round pipe to go through the spool and weld it to the rectangular tubing.

John

Reply to
John

It's interesting that I watched the crews build the Road Runner fiber optic internet backbone along the Central Florida highways around here for almost a month and never saw one fork lift. The first crew trenched and buried two colors of plastic conduit. (One for RR, the other for telephone). Another crew dug holes and installed the equipment vaults. The next crew pulled in the RR fiber, nd the next group installed the equipment and terminated the fiber.

Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

Except you need to forklift to load the reals on such a trailer, so you may as well just use the forklift to hold them if you have it anyway.

But a Forklift may not be the best for straddling a trench. Most forks have a hole or two near the tips for hooking chains or installing hitch balls too. Just build a channel that will fit over the fork and weld a 1/2 hub to the channel. Clamp the channel to the fork or if a hole in the tip area of the fork, drop a pin in to it.

Reply to
Califbill

=A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0Dan

Good point.

Reply to
rangerssuck

I guess they didn't have all the modern technology in Florida.

Learn to use what you have access to or have a big budget to buy or lease the stuff that is designed especially for the job at hand.

I designed and built a machine to lay cable when I had a job to run a

500 ft line to a new equipment building. It took me a day to build the machine out of scrap lying around and about 5 minutes to lay the cable and cover it.

John

Reply to
john

Find the company they hired and tell 'them' how to do their job.

Wow! 500 feet? You could have just rented a ditch wich for a little job like that. They built 'thousands' of miles with their method. That fiber backbone covers most of the US for all the cable TV companies that offer broadband.

What good is a forklift in an open ditch along a busy highway? The dirt was already soft, and there wasn't much room in the right of way. they trenched the area they were working, then backed the trailers off the road just ahead of where they were working and pulled it back to the previoous vault location including under driveways and side roads. The crew I talked to said it was down six feet or more, and that the bottom of the equipment vaults was a little over 12 feet below ground.

The tubing and fiber both had to be fed in as straight of a line as possible. The only place a forklift could have been used was on the highway.

Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

Rather hard to change out reels....

Reply to
David Lesher

No kidding. It would likely take another forklift. That's why the pros use custom trailers. :)

Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

You guys have obviously no knowledge of what is called a prong for forklifts used to move any type of roll or spool with a central hole.

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With this device it is a one man operation to move cable rolls, no come-alongs no manual pushing and shoving. The cable can be held on the prong and unspooled or could be put on a trailer with the prong.

I suggested making a prong for the rough terrain forklift. The spool could be held over the ditch and cable played off the spool.

John

Reply to
John

You have their address?

I was considering using a Ditch Witch but in very sandy soil the ditch will cave in and you get a mess. The machine I designed and built did several other projects too. I build the machine for installing wire to my own building.

I am sure that more than one company laid the cable and they all did not use the same exact method. With a six foot ditch if you don't use shoring OSHA will have a field day with you. The soil type determines the method of operation. South Florida is loaded with coral and can be a real problem digging trenches or even setting electric poles.

John

Reply to
John

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