Pudsey Bear
Full Member
- Messages
- 13,950
My back is so bad now that lifting the scooter in and out is not going to be an option for much longer, changing vans to one with a garage is out of the question too.
So putting my thinking cap on I wondered if there might be a market for a simple to fit and use one, yes but expensive and way over complicated too.
My thinking is you can get a bar which is designed for doing pullups in a house doorway it just expands to fit and must be strong enough to lift an adult without slipping, with a couple of simple shorts straps one on the bar and another for a scooter with one of these 12v hoists it might be a viable system at a low cost.
Hoist & bar picked at random just to post the idea I'd probably get a a better one, but the scoot only weighs 28kgs so no need to go silly, and it won't get a lot of use.
I'm sure there is a flaw in the idea, but it's not leaping out at me. my only concern would be if the bar might damage the van so a way around that might be to support it on a ply baton at each and so you're not putting too much pressure on the van itself.
So putting my thinking cap on I wondered if there might be a market for a simple to fit and use one, yes but expensive and way over complicated too.
My thinking is you can get a bar which is designed for doing pullups in a house doorway it just expands to fit and must be strong enough to lift an adult without slipping, with a couple of simple shorts straps one on the bar and another for a scooter with one of these 12v hoists it might be a viable system at a low cost.
Hoist & bar picked at random just to post the idea I'd probably get a a better one, but the scoot only weighs 28kgs so no need to go silly, and it won't get a lot of use.
I'm sure there is a flaw in the idea, but it's not leaping out at me. my only concern would be if the bar might damage the van so a way around that might be to support it on a ply baton at each and so you're not putting too much pressure on the van itself.