Jay Angler wrote:Congratulations on having a functional clothesline!
A big issue with a long clothesline is that as you load it, the all the "wire stretch" submits to gravity and the center of the line will droop.
Do you have what is called a "clothesline spacer"? We have both a plastic and a metal version. The plastic has more resistance, the metal one with rollers has more risk of getting tangled in stuff - particularly if it's windy. I still recommend a couple of them if you're going to dry big things or heavy things, as it will distribute the weight over both wires more evenly.
Jay Angler wrote:
They tip over in the wind and the clothes lands in the dirt. We do put racks outside occasionally, but on a calm day in a wind-sheltered spot. Catie George is in a humid area, so she *needs* wind or at least airflow to get the clothes to dry.Aimee Bacon wrote:You could get a freestanding drying rack. They make many now that are quite large.
@ Catie George: how are you going to attach the two pulleys? Our tree end was a wire rope around the tree, but putting some blocks of wood so the wire rope can't cut into the tree would be good. The garage end will need the stress well distributed. My sister had a phone wire from the pole to the house, held at the house end by a hook into wood and it pulled right out of the wood. I fixed it... it won't be pulling out again!