Oh, but of course. Yours is upside-down! (But then I suppose Australia is upside-down too.)
No, mine is the other way up (the correct way up) like an umbrella.
Oh, but of course. Yours is upside-down! (But then I suppose Australia is upside-down too.)
No, mine is the other way up (the correct way up) like an umbrella.
But how can you fold it up to get it out of the way? I mean the arms are much longer than it’s height.
As for the correct way, it is not an umbrella (though you can buy a cover to use it as a gazebo) and with mine the weight of clothes makes it lock more firmly into position whereas, with an umbrella design, the weight would make it tend to collapse.
I just nipped out to measure it - each arm is about 2.2 metres long so it needs a circle of at least about 5 metres diameter to operate
BTW your version is definitely the wrong way because rotary clothes lines are an Australian invention and patent.
I was looking at my rotary washing line just now and l think it’s going to be a bit of a task. It’s knowing how to measure the ‘slack’ when it’s lowered to ensure the correct tension of the cord when it’s at full height. I suppose you just tweak it as necessary as JBR said. I think for me, it might be easier said than done!!
How is it done at the time of manufacture? Is it threaded by some sort of machine, or manually by a human?
Gosh, if it’s by a human, what a job for someone to have!!! Eeeeek!
Fair enough. As to why it doesn’t collapse: quality and British made!
Oh, I’d come and do it for you, Angel, but you’ll have to tell me where you live!
JBR, Of course l will tell you where l live… I live in a house!
I am having trouble getting the replacement cord. Nowhere seems to stock it locally. Robert Dyas had some but it didn’t state the width and it looked very thin.
Wilko, usually stock it but had none, nor did any supermarket.
Maybe, they prefer you to buy a new rotary washing line?
Amazon. We use it a lot and, of course, they deliver.
Just be careful to read the descriptions, as there are many different things available.
Even more importantly, read the customer reviews!
Yes, there are so many different ones on Amazon and that’s the reason l tried the shops in the town. I wanted to see the cord before l bought it.
If anyone is interested in an update… this is what happened next.
I decided, l was fed up with traipsing around shops looking for a suitable replacement cord and they were not in stock. Plus, on my old rotary line, the clip things you thread the cord through were perished and kept cracking.
Then Putin threatened to nuke U.K. so l decided, l might as well spend my money on a new top of the range rotary washing line… while l could!!
So off l went to Costco and purchased the Brabantia Lift- O- Matic at £63+.
It’s now in place and ready to dry some washing for me!
It can be adjusted to a very high position, or a low position…
Excellent…
until PooTin nukes the UK!
@Artangel , Bad decision Arty , the nuclear flash will vaporise the Lift-o- magic
and you will have wasted your money !
Far better to stock up on Gin !!
Donkeyman!
I agree, to an extent.
But not gin; Laphroaig.
Donkeyman, There’s only one problem… l don’t drink spirits these days!!
Anyway, this washing line has a special coating that makes it radiation resistant! So it’s just me and the washing that gets marmalised!
But you must realise that all that nasty radiation will squeeze through between the lines and come and get you. It’s rather nasty like that.
Yes, as DM says, once a nuclear strike is announced, you have about 15 minutes (or less) to get as drunk as you can. I promise you, you won’t even know that you have died!
Will my Covid mask protect me if l line it with tin foil?
Oh yes of course. These masks are fantastic. They can protect you from anything and everything. Why do you think the NHS are still making everyone who visits their premises wear them?
@JBR , ‘why do NHS make us wear one’ ?
To stop us catching a disease inside the hospital of course !
Donkeyman!
The truth is: bureaucracy! Nothing more.