safety ropes to chimneys?

How can i fix safety ropes to my chimneys?

At the moment I've got a car tow rope tied round one chimney, but I want something more permanent and weatherproof that I can clip ropes on to...

a metal chain?

Or a metal band around the chimneys?

There must be something on sale but what's it called?

There' s about 5 chimney stacks so I dont want something very expensive, but I do want something safer than nylon ropes which rub against the brick corners and deteriorate in sunlight..

Reply to
George (dicegeorge)
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George (dicegeorge) was thinking very hard :

A length of 6mm fine wire galvanised multi-strand wire would last for many years. Go twice around and fit three proper clamps of the correct size at the overlap.

Reply to
Harry Bloomfield

Silly question whats it for? harnessing you whilst fiddling on the roof?

2 aerial mast lashing kits and a steel pole all greased for weather conditions.
Reply to
George

Ther ya go one at the base of the stack and one in the middle,fix a short steel pole between the two main brackts.

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Reply to
George

Eye bolt masonry anchors are the correct solution, e.g.

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and then a personal safety harness clipped on to it.

There is a specific type of anchor rated for this purpose, but I don't see it on Screwfix.

Are you thinking of something for "fall arrest" that will take the shock load of a person, or just something to add stability to ladders?

Reply to
dom

What's a safety rope? What do you intend doing with it?

Tim

Reply to
Tim Downie

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> - and then a personal safety harness clipped on to it.

I don't know if it's what you meant but we fixed eye bolts to various pzrts of the house wall so that we could fasten a ladder to ropes whilst working on windows from the car port roof.

It works very well.

Mary

Reply to
Mary Fisher

yes, fall arrest, (for when I'm fiddling around on the roof, slipped slates etc) so the tv aerial kit is too light weight, presumably these scaffold eyes go in the brick not the mortar, but the bricks are a bit old and crumbly which is why i thought of wrapping something around the chimney stack....

Reply to
George (dicegeorge)

Presumably so that as you're sitting on the ground contemplating the frayed end of your bit of rope and wondering what to do about your broken leg, the chimney stack falls on you and saves you having to think about anything at all?

Reply to
Huge

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>>> - and then a personal safety harness clipped on to it.

TV aerial kits too light? if anything your chimney stack will be less insecure.

Reply to
George

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>>>>> - and then a personal safety harness clipped on to it.

I would not wish to trust my life on a typical lashing kit. Eye bolts are fine, if they are tested for soundness, but on a crumbling brick scenario they might pull out or the mortar might be old and weak. I think he has the right idea with something lashed around the chimney, but something a bit stronger than an antenna lashing kit.

Reply to
Harry Bloomfield

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>>>>>>> - and then a personal safety harness clipped on to it.

into the brick...And I did say two of these lashing kits and a steel pole clamped to the brackets...if anything is going to give its the chimney's mortar.

Reply to
George

I would not want to trust my life to a chimney. Most chimneys that I have encountered have been much more fragile than the walls of the structure that they are attached to.

If one is talking about a chimney made from engineering brick and a hard mortar, possibly. But the average domestic chimney is only as strong as it needs to be and not designed for restraining a fat arse falling from the sky.

Reply to
Steve Firth

Fat arses can't get on roofs anyway. :-)

Reply to
George

In article , George scribeth thus

And there are a LOT of chimneys held together by aerial lashing wire;!...

Reply to
tony sayer

oh yes I can.

[g]
Reply to
George (dicegeorge)

A fat arse shouldn't be fiddling up on a roof...their reflexs are to slow to pertain a safe balance should the need arise.

Reply to
George

Wuss. Rod Hull would do it.

Reply to
Andy Dingley

Yebbut he had Emu to rescue him if he fell.

Reply to
Steve Firth

So would quasimodo...at least he will have something to fall back on.

Reply to
George

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