he hit an upright on the Ready-racking, which is the kinda stuff you see in the local homeless depot. As little as a 1/8" deflection in the upright can bring down the entire racking set. I work for the factory that builds the stuff setting it up in...
he hit an upright on the Ready-racking, which is the kinda stuff you see in the local homeless depot. As little as a 1/8" deflection in the upright can bring down the entire racking set. I work for the factory that builds the stuff setting it up in stores and warehouses...and I've been called out to my fair share of situations like this to put it back together.
Posted by Guest on Mon May 14 12:52:20 2012
That is one flimsy warehouse. . . A support girder should easily be able to withstand that kind of impact.
Posted by Guest on Sun Apr 29 05:41:46 2012
Might as well keep running all the way to the unemployment line.
Recent comments
Couldve lifted it over then lower it back down....Or w/e
Posted by Guest on Sun Sep 16 04:08:56 2012
This is why
I shop at Lowe's.
Posted by Guest on Fri Jun 8 18:17:01 2012
It wasn't a support girder....
| show fullshow summaryhe hit an upright on the Ready-racking, which is the kinda stuff you see in the local homeless depot. As little as a 1/8" deflection in the upright can bring down the entire racking set. I work for the factory that builds the stuff setting it up in...
he hit an upright on the Ready-racking, which is the kinda stuff you see in the local homeless depot. As little as a 1/8" deflection in the upright can bring down the entire racking set. I work for the factory that builds the stuff setting it up in stores and warehouses...and I've been called out to my fair share of situations like this to put it back together.
Posted by Guest on Mon May 14 12:52:20 2012
That is one flimsy warehouse. . . A support girder should easily be able to withstand that kind of impact.
Posted by Guest on Sun Apr 29 05:41:46 2012
Might as well keep running all the way to the unemployment line.
Posted by Guest on Thu Apr 26 08:32:11 2012