Ladder placement

Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Walk Among Us, Aug 24, 2025 at 5:44 PM.

  1. Walk Among Us

    Walk Among Us Heavy Load Member

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    IMG_1246.jpeg

    I'm going to try installing my own ladder hook(s) on my headache locker. It's a 3 door Merrit brand aluminum locker. I'm thinking of first drilling pilot holes, then using bolts with washers, lock washers and a nut on each bolt. I think the best placement for the rack is right on one of the doors, likely the middle one. The top of that locker doesn't have enough room. Has anyone done something similar?
     
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  3. JB7

    JB7 Heavy Load Member

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    Horizontally and below the doors looks like it would work.
     
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  4. kylefitzy

    kylefitzy Road Train Member

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    I’ve seen guys do two heavy duty shelf brackets and hang the ladder upside down by the bottom rung. Two eye bolts dead center, top and bottom, for a 1” strap. I personally just got a collapsible ladder that fit inside the headace rack. Outside ladders only last a few years in my experience before they rot or get stolen.
     
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  5. CAXPT

    CAXPT Road Train Member

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    I had chained mine to the frame of the truck behind the cab on my last job, because there was no headache rack. All the gear was stored in the trailer header board except for the coil rubber strips which I covered the ladder with and then strapped those to the ladder. :)
    :banghead:
     
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  6. Espressolane

    Espressolane Road Train Member

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    What is the most used door? Also remember that you’re adding weight to it and it will potentially rattle around.
     
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  7. Walk Among Us

    Walk Among Us Heavy Load Member

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    The far left door is most used. Far right door is probably the best location or maybe the bottom. I'm about to go on hometime tomorrow so this is something I'll mess around and see where it fits. I know exactly what Kyle means by putting 2 eye bolts in and threading a 1" strap through the ladder. I did eye bolts before at my last company for tarps on top of the locker. shelving brackets is also a better idea than buying a cheap ladder rack.
     
  8. Carpenter Scotty

    Carpenter Scotty Light Load Member

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    Can’t see if there is room, but you could go off the back side of that nice passenger side toolbox, would keep it clear of the doors on your deck.lock off to the frame. I would sooner climb up one of that style ladder than a collapsible one, if you need to lug up a tarp you would find yourself well over the weight rating on a collapsible one
     
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  9. cool7035

    cool7035 Light Load Member

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    Hey, you can buy a ladder bracket from Lowes that fits them ladders and bolt it to the door. It hooks on one of the rungs. My headache rack sets further back from the cab, so my ladder hung from the bracket between the cab and headache rack. Just need to add a bungie to help prevent the ladder bouncing off the bracket.
     
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  10. Walk Among Us

    Walk Among Us Heavy Load Member

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    Exactly. Yes I am already above my small ladder's rating before I even start carrying tarps up it. It also only extends to 13' and that's not enough when leaning it against a 14' tall load. During home time I am upgrading to a 300 lbs capacity 25' (when extended) ladder that still reduces like my current one. I will check the side area for your idea, which is a good idea.
     
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  11. Carpenter Scotty

    Carpenter Scotty Light Load Member

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    We have some of those 300 pound ones at work, great product. I’m 230 before I get my boots , carpentry rig, harness, and whatever I’m carrying up to install moving up there. 300 goes fast, but there usually able to surpass that by at least 50% before failure. I’ve broken many straight steps, never those folding ones, they get a workout putting in lvl’s
     
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