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I am about to invest in some new stepladders. I was thinking of getting Youngman fibreglass stepladders but have been told they are not as stable as aluminium. Also, are they really much safer for domestic electrical work? Aluminium stepladders have rubber insulated feet, which should give similar protection. What do you recommend?
 
I came off aluminium step ladders once and dislocated my shoulder. The only work injury I've ever had! Much prefer the fibreglass ones on a day to day basis as they're much more sturdy although they are heavier to carry about.
 
A lot of sites ban metal steps now, go down the fibre glass route, some sites even ban steps full stop.
 
4 treads fibreglass will reach most things anything higher you’ll be looking for a different method. Fibreglass are sturdy.
 
If it’s the only set you’ll have in a van then 5 or 6 tread. I’ve got a 3 tread + top ‘step’ that is not to be used as a step or a seat or even looked at in a funny way - I use it as a step, a seat and I pull some funny faces to keep it happy!
I also in the van have some fibre glass little giants 4 steps that extend, open up and do all sorts of funny things. Point is that I’ve got a little van NV200 Nissan and both these go in. If I need anything longer my ‘wooden doubles’ go on the roof rack.
 
I think if you do a risk assessment and method statement you will find you must have fibre glass non conductive ladder for so many scenarios. Personally I always use youngman fibre glass. 4 tread with platform 6 tread and 12 tread all fibre glass.
 
Me I got some cheap 3 step ali ones from B&Q's. When they broke, I got some more. If its all domestic work, there's no manic site agent giving you grief, or the chance of marking Mrs Miggins Vienna marble floor tiles or her shag pile.
 
I bought a fibreglass platform step ladder recently in homebase as they were labelled wrong, got them for £63 instead of £90.
They had put wrong barcodes on the shelf and also the ladders. some were priced correct, so pot luck which you picked up. I only noticed as I was in there solely for them. so when I went through the till and got charged £63 i was well happy. went back next day to check the shelves.
 
I am about to invest in some new stepladders. I was thinking of getting Youngman fibreglass stepladders but have been told they are not as stable as aluminium. Also, are they really much safer for domestic electrical work? Aluminium stepladders have rubber insulated feet, which should give similar protection. What do you recommend?
I’ve had fibreglass steps for years now and they are solid feel better on them than I have on any aluminium steps I’ve ever had but they are heavy as hell
 
I’ve had fibreglass steps for years now and they are solid feel better on them than I have on any aluminium steps I’ve ever had but they are heavy as hell
Mine have been on the roof rack for a few years as well the plastic cap on the top has discoloured and the bolts that hold the spreaders have a light rust but they are still pretty much ok I do wash them with the van every week though
 
Worth mentioning as well... if you're not careful, it's much easier than you might expect to fracture the legs.

I was moving my steps a few feet when they were open, only to get one leg hooked on a door frame, I didn't realise and carried on going. Went off with a hell of a crack.
 
Worth mentioning as well... if you're not careful, it's much easier than you might expect to fracture the legs.

I was moving my steps a few feet when they were open, only to get one leg hooked on a door frame, I didn't realise and carried on going. Went off with a hell of a crack.
so you now have a long john silver ladder?
 
I think if you do a risk assessment and method statement you will find you must have fibre glass non conductive ladder for so many scenarios. Personally I always use youngman fibre glass. 4 tread with platform 6 tread and 12 tread all fibre glass.

Most risk assessments would assess out any risk of electric shock so having GRP steps is a non-starter.
 
When I asked the H&S bloke at the factory where I worked if we could get glass fibre steps because the walls of the factory are metal and there’s a lot of water about.
His response was that we should stand the steps on a rubber mat.
 
If it’s the only set you’ll have in a van then 5 or 6 tread. I’ve got a 3 tread + top ‘step’ that is not to be used as a step or a seat or even looked at in a funny way - I use it as a step, a seat and I pull some funny faces to keep it happy!
I also in the van have some fibre glass little giants 4 steps that extend, open up and do all sorts of funny things. Point is that I’ve got a little van NV200 Nissan and both these go in. If I need anything longer my ‘wooden doubles’ go on the roof rack.
I had to get on the top step of a 10 thread set a few weeks ago, it was squeaky bum time to say the least

maxresdefault.jpg


I sort of felt like this guy, fitting a led low bay
 
I had to get on the top step of a 10 thread set a few weeks ago, it was squeaky bum time to say the least

View attachment 45041

I sort of felt like this guy, fitting a led low bay
What a weird photo - why does he need to be on a step ladder when he’s in a stadium and everyone is looking down onto the ring - Oh, another unexplained phenomenon!
 
The FiberGlass ladders feel more sturdy but weigh more so I always go with aluminum. I have found that ladders too tall for a given room are just a pain. I use a 6 foot ladder for the ceilings are 7.5 and a 10 foot where ceilings are 12 or more. Read more on differences of fiberglass and alluminium on this website
 

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