Home Wheelchair Installation 3 Basic Steps

by Max Eyres

Installation of a Home Lift or referred to as a TFL “Through Floor Lift” is accomplished in 3 stages. First stage would be for a surveyor to attend your home and carry out a technical site survey.

The main reason for a home site survey is to ensure there is a suitable location for the wheelchair to be installed. For correct installation the location of the intended wheelchair lift would be for it to be fixed to a solid wall.

The placement depends on the design of your home. A feasibility study of the design and layout will determine where the home lift can be located. Once you agree to purchase the wheelchair lift and sign the agreement and pay your deposit the next stage will be for the builders to attend and carry out preparatory work! Removing the floorboards and cutting the joists in the ceiling to allow for an Aperture to be fitted (Hole in the Ceiling)

A small amount of electrical installation work is required to run an electrical supply feed to the new wheelchair lift and cables have to be routed to the Call Control Stations located up and downstairs. Do not be put off by the sound of all this work! A good team OF workers can have the work completed in half a day without any mess or fuss.

If your new home lift is hydraulic operated (Ram Driven) a self contained pump unit will be installed outside normally on the opposite side of the solid fixed wall where your home lift has been installed. Stage three would be to build and construct the lift car guides and Ram Assembly unit to the solid wall. Once secure and in place a metal lifting sling is attached. The sling is basically a frame work for the lift car to be placed installed on.

Wheelchair lift manufacturers can install a home lift in a single day. The lift arrives in boxes! Kit form. All parts are clearly labelled and fit together like one huge jigsaw. It’s an amazing sight to watch a well organised installation team in operation.

About the Author: