darrens
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posted on 30/11/09 at 05:06 PM |
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Car Turntable
A friend of mine is developing a car turntable, which would have a number of uses within the car build/restoration aswell as normal use for poeple
that hve the room to swing the car round.
It's being developed as a DIY installation with the weights of it such that two men can assemble this easily
He's asked me to dig into such a demand for something like this.
Would anyone on here be interested in such thing. Attached is a rough layout of what is proposed
Cheers
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Alan_Thomas
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posted on 30/11/09 at 05:15 PM |
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I cannot see the point of it.
A body roller inverts the car and allows easy access to the underneath - really useful.
But why would you want to turn it this way, surely if you want to get to the other end of the car you simply walk around it rather than spin the car
around to face you?
- Alan
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coozer
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posted on 30/11/09 at 05:15 PM |
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I would make the turning ring (4) bigger than the width to give some stability.
I remember seeing this on the news along time ago for a lady who had a short drive living on a main road so she could drive straight in, turn it round
and straight out again.
1972 V8 Jago
1980 Z750
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morcus
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posted on 30/11/09 at 05:18 PM |
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I would be usefull if you lived on a main road so you could go forward in and forward out. I've got a friend who's always having problems
because his road is busy so if tries to go in backwards, people drive up behind him and reversing out is near suicidal.
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matt_gsxr
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posted on 30/11/09 at 05:24 PM |
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I drive past a house with one of these. It is rather prettier than the diagram shown with what looks like a sun on it. It saves them reversing into
a busy road.
Anyway, googling "car turntable" shows up a load of stuff.
What is your friend differentiator? Cost?
Matt
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mr henderson
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posted on 30/11/09 at 06:02 PM |
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How far off the ground are the channels that the wheels will sit in? Those channels are either going to have to be very heavy, of they are going to
bend, which means they will need to be well off the ground so they don't drag on the ground while turning.
People who have more than one car in thier workshop (like me) will usually just put the cars on dollies (one under each wheel), can swing them around
all over the place with those. Being able to move the car from side to side is usally more important than being able to turn it around
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ReMan
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posted on 30/11/09 at 06:21 PM |
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I've seen them in business car parks in city centres, to maximise parking and when entrys are very narrow to make reversing difficult, but they
tend to be a whole circle at floor level so the car can enter and leave at any angle, also avoids any tripping or wheel damage hazzard
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jacko
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posted on 30/11/09 at 06:22 PM |
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Not cars but at the national train museum in York there is a BIG turn table so they can park lot of trains in a circle
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designer
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posted on 30/11/09 at 06:40 PM |
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As said the rotating bit must be as wide as the unit itself to give enough support with a light structure.
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darrens
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posted on 30/11/09 at 06:41 PM |
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I think his main target is to be for people turning their cars around so they can drive out forwards and not have a suicide mission reversing out.
Cost wise reckons around the £1500 mark, depending on volume he can shift etc.
Cheers
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Miks15
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posted on 30/11/09 at 07:41 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by jacko
Not cars but at the national train museum in York there is a BIG turn table so they can park lot of trains in a circle
Like thomas the tank engine
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RAYLEE29
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posted on 30/11/09 at 10:31 PM |
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Inmo the design is wrong surely most cars are weighted differently front to rear so the stress on the bearings will be v high. The ends of the ramps
will need supporting on a track Ray
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mediabloke
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posted on 30/11/09 at 11:09 PM |
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If the channels on the turntable are for the wheels, not to lift the chassis, would these not be cheaper & more practical:
Clicky linky?
Edit: Sorry - just re-read earlier post re. driveway entry / exit.
[Edited on 30/11/09 by mediabloke]
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RK
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posted on 30/11/09 at 11:18 PM |
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I first thought: why doesn't he just play CD's or use an iPod with an FM transmitter, but then I knew it had to be for those BEC boys who
have already passed SVA.
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morcus
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posted on 1/12/09 at 03:15 AM |
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I'd love a record deck in the car, I've seen them on tv with really complex balancing systems. I know in car record players existed in the
past but they used a weird sized disc at a strange speed.
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