Wow! More house movers need this! Seems like less work to set up. Not to mention this is an amazing way to add a new basement and another floor above giving more square footage.
1:12 I am perplexed. The beams under the house are UNDER the beam that does the lift? So the whole load is supported by the tensile strength of those four thin rods? I am seeing that right? Shouldn't your load be applying compression forces to the beams, not tensile forces to rods? How is this fail safe? If those rods fail under tensile forces, the whole thing comes crashing down. Where is the fail safe design?
Wow! More house movers need this! Seems like less work to set up. Not to mention this is an amazing way to add a new basement and another floor above giving more square footage.
Such a great technology that looks so much safer!
1:12
I am perplexed. The beams under the house are UNDER the beam that does the lift? So the whole load is supported by the tensile strength of those four thin rods? I am seeing that right? Shouldn't your load be applying compression forces to the beams, not tensile forces to rods?
How is this fail safe? If those rods fail under tensile forces, the whole thing comes crashing down. Where is the fail safe design?
Any in the Ct area ??
how does this work on cement houses?
what if the lot side-to-side clearance is less than 6’ ?
Any one in the NC area or on east cost that will come to MTAiry area to lift double wide and in stall basement