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Frnak McKenney Frnak McKenney is offline
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Default telescoping aluminum pole?

On Mon, 11 May 2009 02:51:24 -0700 (PDT), Jim Wilkins wrote:
On May 10, 11:38*pm, Don Foreman
wrote:
On Sun, 10 May 2009 22:01:24 -0500, cavelamb
wrote:

You know those magic telescoping poles that can lock?


Useful for boat poles, spinnaker and jib poles, or changing light bulbs.


Anybody have a clue how these things work?


They're slightly elliptical, *so they sort of cam lock when the mating
parts are rotated relative to each other.


Just looked, it has two short plastic cylinders with identically
offset center holes, one piece pressed into the inner tube and the
other free to rotate on a screw. I use them for trimming branches and
cleaning the gutter. The lock holds well for endwise forces but not,
of course, to much twisting.


Jim,

Your mention of gutter cleaning caught my eye, as my rear gutters are
two stories up. I have an extension ladder that gets that high, but it
requires a lot of effort to set up, and more to keep moving it down
the side of the house.

I've tried a tall leaf-blower extension, but that gets a bit unwieldy
at the two-story mark; any suggestions you could offer would be much
appreciated.

How do you use the extension pole? Vertically ("ladderless"), or
horizontally ("less ladder-shifting")? What to you use at the end of
it?


Frank McKenney
--
Inborn desires are a nuisance to those with utopian and totalitarian
visions, which often amount to the same thing. What stands in the
way of most utopias is not pestilence and drought but human behavior.
-- Steven Pinker, "The Blank Slate"
--
Frank McKenney, McKenney Associates
Richmond, Virginia / (804) 320-4887
Munged E-mail: frank uscore mckenney ayut mined spring dawt cahm (y'all)