10 Heavy-Duty legs (63 running feet) clamped in a 4-foot-wide bundle with a Parts Basket.Heavy-Duty Side viewRadius Walls are as easy as straight wallsWe go everywhere mast-climbers go, but they can’t go where we go.Elevator shafts and stair towers are a piece of cake.Tight sites are not a problem with Heavy-DutySloping sites are no problem. Just set towers down and winch the platform level.Setup Heavy-Duty on any ground conditionsSwivel the tower to land it parallel to the wall.Inside corner, then a radius, then another inside corner, then an outside corner, all 36 feet high, sets up in a little more than an hour. Non-Stop moves from wall to wall FAST – one tower every 10 minutes with any forklift.Walk Boards Stowed Under The Work Bench.All ready for the first course. Never run scaffold-high again.Towers are assembled on the ground and lifted up with the Swivel Forklift Bar.Put the forklift bar halfway up the tower and it will be bottom heavy for liftingA view from underneath. That’s 2800 bricks. Don’t try this at home.Barricade GuardrailPlenty of real estate on the platformNatural works at his fastest pace when the wall is waist highNon-Stop is good to go in inside slabs. Don’t try this with mast climbersSetup Non-Stop as high as 45 feet freestanding and tie in as you goTurning corners with Non-Stop is easier than turning corners with framesThis contractor placed a material landing tower past the corner on a difficult jobsiteLand full pallets of materials in every other bay with Non-Stop even before its tied inNo special drawing are required for using Non-Stop on very tall jobsWe have two different enclosure systems.A great day’s production using Non-StopAll these towers were placed from the right side with a side stabbing forklift barOpen bays can be readily squeezed or stretched as neededTurn corners with easeReadily adaptable to offsetsThese towers were assembled in an afternoon ready to be picked and placed at the wall in the morningNon-Stop is easy to tie in even with large voids in the wallBrick veneer is a walk in the park using Non-Stop. Raise the scaffold every 5 courses of brickNon-Stops simply tie-in bracketNon-Stop puts the masons at the perfect height when they must reach over rebarNon-Stop’s adjustable bridges extends the length of the scaffold or spans over ditches and openingsMove your towers inside with a skid steer and turn those inside walls into money wallsWith proper shoring, Non-Stop is building the insets that mast climbers can’t reachThe rear view of Non-Stop mixed with mast climbersMulti-angled structures are easy with Non-Stop’s independent towersAnother example of Non-Stop on tight sitesThe masons platform using 3 planksNotice how the inside corner returns save the day on this insetTowers are easily assembled on the ground and flown in with a crane to increase heightSet towers in awkward spots with the side stabbing forklift bar and use inside corner returns to make quick work of insetsThese towers were placed the same using the side stabbing forklift bar made quick work of this inset. Notice how the work platforms overlapAnother example of an inset quickly setup with corner returns making the planking a snap to layoutThis was a lot easier than it looks. The bases were set under the steel and then the towers, X-brace together with the carriages on them where stabbed in from above.This 3-car elevator shaft would have been a nightmare if build from each floorIf you can plank frames, you can plank Non-StopRadius wall setup just as fast as straight wallElevator shafts turn into money walls when you put Non-Stop inside of themSloping sites are never a problem for Non-Stop. Set towers in place and crank the platform levelPlanking the deck to be one level is a standard configuration that yields a surprising amount of room to work inside elevator shaftsFly short towers or 200-foot-tall towers from wall to wall with a craneSet the scaffold in place before any work begins. When the wall gets scaffold-high, he slides out the outriggers (down by his ankles) and drops walk boards in placeA downward shot of an elevator pitComplete towers (as high at 200 feet or more) can be moved from wall to wall with a crane as quickly as using a forkliftThis is about 300 linear feet of Non-Stop being transported to another job