Nice work guys. I have a question. I want to build a ramp for a lady at our church (and we're going to take donations from folks because she doesn't have the ability to pay for it). I measured the run and the threshold of her house is 3' high. I have a concrete slab that runs roughly 25' from the landing. So if you figure a 25' ramp with a rise of 3', do you think this is gradual enough for a straight run (without being too steep)? Please let me know. I will need to get clearance with the town and, well, it's NJ so that will be a challenge in and of itself. Thanks!
Interesting that the opening image is of a commercial branded ramp with the deck boards installed incorrectly (upside down). Not a confidence builder!
Nice work guys. I have a question.
I want to build a ramp for a lady at our church (and we're going to take donations from folks because she doesn't have the ability to pay for it). I measured the run and the threshold of her house is 3' high. I have a concrete slab that runs roughly 25' from the landing. So if you figure a 25' ramp with a rise of 3', do you think this is gradual enough for a straight run (without being too steep)? Please let me know. I will need to get clearance with the town and, well, it's NJ so that will be a challenge in and of itself. Thanks!
Joe The Handyman type
ix is nice for that.
woodprix is full of awesome tips. Very helpful to me. Thanks
I'm sure you can find awesome woodworking plans on woodprix website
Go to stodoys page if you want to learn how to build it yourself
Just do it yourself, go to woodprix page and learn how .
Crap construction, thumbs down!!!
The wide gaps and crooked boards to start with, overall concept is good though.