Tarp angled into the wind.
No problems.
Thanks Roundabout, Yes I am lost myself. What you say makes sense about holding from the top down. I just ordered a roll of mule tape which I hopes does the trick... which I am intrigued by Soliton. Do you have a pic of your set? So the rope ties off on a chain link ofor the lag in the foot plate and to another lag/chain? Is that then three lags at each POLE? Two in the plate, one in the playa?Roundabout wrote:I lost track in your description, but it sounded like your walls are all shade cloth, so I don't see any wind pressure issues. You are going overkill with the extra lags in the feet. A lag in a foot only serves to keep the leg from walking in the wind, which is a useful function, but if the air pressure builds under your roof tarp, the legs will simply lift out of the feet and off it goes. Extra lags in the feet have zero effect. The key is to cinch or guy the connector at the top of leg to the ground.
Soliton wrote:FWIW,-- I used two lag bolts on each foot pad. The reason wasn't to make sure it wouldn't come loose (no chance of that!), but it allowed me to tie the hold-down ropes at ground level and kept the post base from moving (pivoting) around the single lag bolt. I used rope tied to a chain link that went up and over the top tube fitting (extra wrap there) and then down to the second lag-bolt link with a trucker's hitch. That way it was easy to adjust tension on the rope and tie knots at ground level instead of on a ladder. The extra work of putting in and taking out a lag bolt per foot was really inconsequential relative to the whole structure.
Which "this" structure?Rusty Needles wrote:... We are duplicating this structure...