I need a ladder to climb up telephone poles to run CAT6 cable and attach cameras and access points. Only go as high as the phone and cable company cable. Many feet below the power wires.
Have a nice 28' fiberglass ladder with a bracket with 1/2 circle so that half circle leans against the pole. Not a ladder rung.
Have a plain older 28' aluminum ladder.
Fiberglass ladders are nice but weigh more than aluminum.
Heavy duty aluminum ladders are nice and have less bounce than lighter duty aluminum ladders but weigh more
I think I might be better with a heavier duty aluminum 20' ladder (maybe 24') extended all the way out than a 28' lighter duty aluminum ladder extended partially out.
The ladder climber is 7 decades old.
In reality I need two ladders. Run a CAT6 cable between two telephone poles, attach a Fluke remote to one end, go back to the other end with my Fluke cable verifyer and verify the cable. Remove both Fluke items. Connect the CAT6 cable as needed.
Have a nice 28' fiberglass ladder with a bracket with 1/2 circle so that half circle leans against the pole. Not a ladder rung.
Have a plain older 28' aluminum ladder.
Fiberglass ladders are nice but weigh more than aluminum.
Heavy duty aluminum ladders are nice and have less bounce than lighter duty aluminum ladders but weigh more
I think I might be better with a heavier duty aluminum 20' ladder (maybe 24') extended all the way out than a 28' lighter duty aluminum ladder extended partially out.
The ladder climber is 7 decades old.
In reality I need two ladders. Run a CAT6 cable between two telephone poles, attach a Fluke remote to one end, go back to the other end with my Fluke cable verifyer and verify the cable. Remove both Fluke items. Connect the CAT6 cable as needed.