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When a caged ladder should include rest platforms

Height, user fatigue, and project policy all matter when planning a long vertical route.

When a caged ladder should include rest platforms

A caged ladder can look simple on paper, but a long climbing route deserves more planning than just repeating ladder sections. Once climbing height increases, users benefit from better route segmentation and safer landing logic.

Rest platforms are useful when the project basis, internal safety policy, or actual climbing condition suggests the route should be broken into more manageable sections. They also help when the top access point is not a simple single landing.

Rather than assuming a universal rule, the best approach is to review total rise, user behavior, site policy, and transition details together during drawing review.

RFQ prep

Recommended downloads before quoting

Use these files to align dimensions, finish direction and RFQ scope before sending final drawings.

Material and Finish Selection Guide
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Material and Finish Selection Guide

A practical guide to finish selection based on humidity, coast, cleaning, and lifecycle expectations.

Download PDF
Product Parameter Guide
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Product Parameter Guide

Use this guide to align the first round of product discussion with practical dimensions.

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RFQ and Drawing Submission Checklist
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RFQ and Drawing Submission Checklist

A buyer-facing checklist that improves quotation efficiency.

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Related reading

Use these articles to explain specs, materials, standards, and RFQ preparation to buyers and project teams.