I had intended to post this in the spring but got too busy. So here it is now...
I like to tinker a lot with Honda snowblowers and lawn mowers. Mostly snowblowers. There is a lot of maintenance to the single stage ones because I do a lot of properties. When spring comes I do a partial teardown and get them ready for next season. This past spring I was doing oil changes on my machines, replacing augers and scrapper bars, etc. To do this (like many of you) I put the machines on a hydraulic lift cart to bring them up to working height. Because I have so little working space in my garage, once I get the cart and machine in place I can no longer move past them quickly in an emergency. (Yeah yeah....for those of you who know me—my rotund figure doesn't help.)
Anyways, once raised by the lift table, the handlebar of the blower is now pretty high up in my small 9' ceiling garage (<8' with the garage door open). In fact, the blower's handlebar touches the garage release handle on my door opener.
Sadly, my garage door was opened.
You get what happened next....
It caught on the release handle and down came the door. Because I could not move around quickly enough to grab it, it crashed to the ground full force. Often my dog lays there with in the spring when I am working, but luckily he wasn't there when this happened. Also lucky I didn't damage the garage door. The spring latch on the release is a little off-center so I couldn't raise the door myself and get it to reengage. I ended up lifting it bit by bit and blocking it until I could get close enough to the latch. Then I held the door with a C clamp so I could work the release latch.
Moral of the story is to trim that long 18" release handle on your door if you routinely swing material around in your shop, or have a lot of things that can catch on the handle. I've trimmed mine down significantly, but looking at it in the pic below now I think I will just remove the handle altogether. I'm the only one who will ever use it.
(It's not like my wife's car will ever see the inside of the garage again.)
I like to tinker a lot with Honda snowblowers and lawn mowers. Mostly snowblowers. There is a lot of maintenance to the single stage ones because I do a lot of properties. When spring comes I do a partial teardown and get them ready for next season. This past spring I was doing oil changes on my machines, replacing augers and scrapper bars, etc. To do this (like many of you) I put the machines on a hydraulic lift cart to bring them up to working height. Because I have so little working space in my garage, once I get the cart and machine in place I can no longer move past them quickly in an emergency. (Yeah yeah....for those of you who know me—my rotund figure doesn't help.)
Anyways, once raised by the lift table, the handlebar of the blower is now pretty high up in my small 9' ceiling garage (<8' with the garage door open). In fact, the blower's handlebar touches the garage release handle on my door opener.
Sadly, my garage door was opened.
You get what happened next....
It caught on the release handle and down came the door. Because I could not move around quickly enough to grab it, it crashed to the ground full force. Often my dog lays there with in the spring when I am working, but luckily he wasn't there when this happened. Also lucky I didn't damage the garage door. The spring latch on the release is a little off-center so I couldn't raise the door myself and get it to reengage. I ended up lifting it bit by bit and blocking it until I could get close enough to the latch. Then I held the door with a C clamp so I could work the release latch.
Moral of the story is to trim that long 18" release handle on your door if you routinely swing material around in your shop, or have a lot of things that can catch on the handle. I've trimmed mine down significantly, but looking at it in the pic below now I think I will just remove the handle altogether. I'm the only one who will ever use it.
(It's not like my wife's car will ever see the inside of the garage again.)