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2011-01-01 10:56 PM - last edited on 2023-05-25 04:52 PM by Rubia Torres
2011-01-02 05:39 PM
2011-01-02 08:58 PM
2011-01-03 11:48 AM
"Matthew Lohden"...and it is illegal for public/commercial use in the states...[/quote wrote:
I hate to go off topic here but could you explain why it's illegal? I don't know and I'm curious if you don't mind.
2011-01-03 02:22 PM
Matthew wrote:This condition is very common in residential projects, so should not be so hard to accomplish with this tool. The continuous handrail on the inside of the stair is the tricky part.
In their defense it is a tricky detail to work out (particularly in wood trimmed carriage stairs) and it is illegal for public/commercial use in the states so the need to model this condition is rather rare at least over here.
2011-01-03 06:21 PM
David wrote:Yes, I had to work around this quite often back when I was doing residential work. The rail easement is the trickiest bit, which is most easily solved with a newel post, which as I recall is not supported in Stairmaker. I remember one project I did with Rill & Decker where I had to stick build the entire staircase.Matthew wrote:This condition is very common in residential projects, so should not be so hard to accomplish with this tool. The continuous handrail on the inside of the stair is the tricky part.
In their defense it is a tricky detail to work out (particularly in wood trimmed carriage stairs) and it is illegal for public/commercial use in the states so the need to model this condition is rather rare at least over here.
David
2011-01-09 02:57 PM
zeropointreference wrote:I'm not really a code expert so I don't know the details, but I assume it has to do with making an easy transition from stair to landing to reduce tripping and falling hazards. The zero return does make for a tight stair and it makes sense to me that one would prefer not to be navigating such a stair with a random assortment of other folks entering or leaving a public place, particularly in a hurried or panicked manner. In residential applications where stairs are typically used by only one person at a time (or two or three who know each other) tight stairs aren't such a problem.Matthew wrote:I hate to go off topic here but could you explain why it's illegal? I don't know and I'm curious if you don't mind.
...and it is illegal for public/commercial use in the states...
2011-01-09 03:48 PM
2011-01-10 01:29 PM