..your hammock indoors? I am working on hanging 2 hammocks in a bedroom for fulltime (365 nights/yr) use. I have no room for stands. The walls are plaster over lathboard. Need your suggestions, experiences. Thanks!
- Duffy
..your hammock indoors? I am working on hanging 2 hammocks in a bedroom for fulltime (365 nights/yr) use. I have no room for stands. The walls are plaster over lathboard. Need your suggestions, experiences. Thanks!
- Duffy
Something hidden. Go and find it. Go, and look behind the Ranges. Something lost behind the Ranges. Lost and waiting for you . . . Go! - Rudyard Kipling
Are you sure you can't do the portable pipe stand? You could go from wall to wall and lose only a foot or less and you can do whatever height you wanted.
Dave
The best things in life aren't things. -- Art Buchwald
Here's a stand I built for indoor/outdoor use, still looking a bit unfinished in this pic. The wooden parts are 1 1/8" hardwood broomstick handles at about $6 each. Packs away in a lawn chair bag.
David
Use a 2x4 floor to ceiling on each side of the room to capture the horizontal pipe, and several screws or toggle bolts to mount 2x4 onto wall, 2x4 holds vertical force and pipe holds horizontal force. Wall and screws handle forces on plane with the wall. If someone starts swinging really heavily then all bets are off. It worked in my buddy's house which had plaster walls.
He made his son's room a camo camping theme. Hung camo hammock, camo tarp, camo everything. Pretty neat. His wife insisted on having a bed in there. Rarely gets used.
It's a very small bedroom - 10' x 11' - if that helps...
Real Freedom lies in wildness, not in civilization. ~ Charles Lindbergh
It's probably in the mid to high teens, I'm still working out some design issues to make it easier to build for non-woodworking types and simplify some of my hardware choices to more commonly available items.
That little piece of aluminum tubing that joins the top rail is an oddball size I had to order from a place that supplies materials for making antennas. I use bicycle seat post clamps to limit the travel of the top rail at the tripods. Should be able to come up with some better options.
David
Somewhere behind the lath & plaster are 2x4 studs. Finding them can be an issue, but most electrical outlets/switches are tacked into them on one side. An older (1920-1930's), well built home should have the studs 16" on center. Trick is to find one where you want it and screw your vertical 2x4 to it.
You can do the square frame out of 2x4's and reinforce it with gussets, which can be trip problems like tent stakes or head bangers if they are low enough.
The framing and gussets are centered with your hammock.
Drill any holes for screws in the plaster first. Tapping into it with a hammer and nails or big screws can cause stress cracks and may even do more damage.
Love is blind. Marriage is an eye opener.
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