Skip to main content

Hello,

 

I am just getting back into the forum after several months of family churn and moving from Indiana to Arizona. Good to be getting back into the hobby.

 

Our mobile home is cramped and the only location for a layout is over a full size bed which still has to be able to be used as a bed on occasion.

 

I was thinking of building about a 5x9 layout at 'normal' height over the bed with the capability of raising it up on adjustable legs for when the bed needed to be used.

 

Height would vary from about 42" operating height and add about another 2' when the bed had to be used.

 

There just is no other location that works and I would like to avoid a layout type that requird me to clean off the board to free the bed.

 

I thought about using 1 1/2 inch PVC sliding in 2"PVC legs with height adjustable with a pin in holes thru the PVC.

 

Stability is a concern in the raised position.

 

Any ideas and advice would be greatly appreciated.

 

Thank you,

Dennis

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

I used a cheap pulley system on my HO garage layout for a time in California back in the 70's. Unfortunately, I'm not sure there is enough bracing in the right places in the ceiling of a mobile home for this to work efficiently, so the idea of using adjustable legs might work better. If I was going to attempt this I would integrate the legs with the bedframe for stability like a poster bed, something like this:

http://www.willygoat.com/catal...e.asp?productID=6831

 

In my scenario, each post would be comprised of three 2x4s. The first 2x4 would be 42" high, the 2nd would be 66" high and the 3rd would be whatever you wanted the final height of the poster bed to be. It could be as low as 4" above the previous level. Then too, I'm not sure a 24" variance for the 2nd level would be enough for some people. Most people are used to 8' ceilings, so I'd try something more like 36", depending on how high 2 people can lift the layout comfortably.

 

Anyway, these three 2x4's would be sandwiched together to form a sort of ladder at each of the 4 corners. The layout would be a 5x9 sheet of 1/2" plywood (or whatever). It would be on a 1x4 frame with joists just like a traditional table layout. The plywood would be notched at each corner so the bedposts would fit up through the layout. All 4 sandwiches would face out from the headboard.

 

The layout frame would rest on the 42" level while the layout was in-use. It would then be lifted to the next higher level when the bed was in-use. At each level, a long bolt would go through the frame and post to secure the layout at each corner.

 

The key is that the layout could be lifted to the next level and then rest on that level until the bolts were secured. I would also secure the posts at the headboard end to the wall. If you do this though, you'd have to put the bots in first and then cover up the lower bolts when not in use as a safety precaution.

 

 

Posterbed

Attachments

Images (1)
  • Posterbed
Last edited by DoubleDAZ

Just for clarification, I wouldn't make the posts in my suggestion part of the bed, I'd make them part of a separate frame around the bed. The whole thing can be stabilize by attaching 2 of the posts to the wall and the other 2 posts to the ceiling. If the room is wide enough, you could even turn the assembly perpendicular to the bed. There are a lot of options depending on the size and layout of the bedroom. I did the pulley thing in a garage over the car back in the 70's. While it worked, I wish I had thought of this post idea back then.

Post
The Track Planning and Layout Design Forum is sponsored by

AN OGR FORUM CHARTER SPONSOR

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×