Need snow shield ideas for photo eye case
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We have two automatic bay doors at our carwash. These doors are operated (open, close) by photoeyes. When installed they were installed diagonally to each other instead of horizontally. One of the eyes on both exit doors was installed pretty much right on the ground in metal square cases. Problem is that when it snows because one is so close to the ground snow covers the eye and the door opens. I've got to work and the doors are open and things are a little froze. I'm looking for ideas on how to build something around it to block it from being covered. I've thought about raising it a bit from the ground, but I'd have to raise the other one as well. I've got a couple pictures attached. Let me know if anymore are needed. Thanks
building
add a comment |
We have two automatic bay doors at our carwash. These doors are operated (open, close) by photoeyes. When installed they were installed diagonally to each other instead of horizontally. One of the eyes on both exit doors was installed pretty much right on the ground in metal square cases. Problem is that when it snows because one is so close to the ground snow covers the eye and the door opens. I've got to work and the doors are open and things are a little froze. I'm looking for ideas on how to build something around it to block it from being covered. I've thought about raising it a bit from the ground, but I'd have to raise the other one as well. I've got a couple pictures attached. Let me know if anymore are needed. Thanks
building
Is it the snow right on the eye, or would snow mid-driveway also trigger it to open. Do you need to keep the entire path of the beam clear?
– Willk
Feb 2 at 21:45
Snow gathers right on the eye. The beam is fine, but when the eye gets covered it breaks the beam and causes the door to remain open. Its the safety feature. I can set the doors to manual but if that beam is broke that door opens.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:08
add a comment |
We have two automatic bay doors at our carwash. These doors are operated (open, close) by photoeyes. When installed they were installed diagonally to each other instead of horizontally. One of the eyes on both exit doors was installed pretty much right on the ground in metal square cases. Problem is that when it snows because one is so close to the ground snow covers the eye and the door opens. I've got to work and the doors are open and things are a little froze. I'm looking for ideas on how to build something around it to block it from being covered. I've thought about raising it a bit from the ground, but I'd have to raise the other one as well. I've got a couple pictures attached. Let me know if anymore are needed. Thanks
building
We have two automatic bay doors at our carwash. These doors are operated (open, close) by photoeyes. When installed they were installed diagonally to each other instead of horizontally. One of the eyes on both exit doors was installed pretty much right on the ground in metal square cases. Problem is that when it snows because one is so close to the ground snow covers the eye and the door opens. I've got to work and the doors are open and things are a little froze. I'm looking for ideas on how to build something around it to block it from being covered. I've thought about raising it a bit from the ground, but I'd have to raise the other one as well. I've got a couple pictures attached. Let me know if anymore are needed. Thanks
building
building
asked Feb 2 at 20:40
ChadChad
247
247
Is it the snow right on the eye, or would snow mid-driveway also trigger it to open. Do you need to keep the entire path of the beam clear?
– Willk
Feb 2 at 21:45
Snow gathers right on the eye. The beam is fine, but when the eye gets covered it breaks the beam and causes the door to remain open. Its the safety feature. I can set the doors to manual but if that beam is broke that door opens.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:08
add a comment |
Is it the snow right on the eye, or would snow mid-driveway also trigger it to open. Do you need to keep the entire path of the beam clear?
– Willk
Feb 2 at 21:45
Snow gathers right on the eye. The beam is fine, but when the eye gets covered it breaks the beam and causes the door to remain open. Its the safety feature. I can set the doors to manual but if that beam is broke that door opens.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:08
Is it the snow right on the eye, or would snow mid-driveway also trigger it to open. Do you need to keep the entire path of the beam clear?
– Willk
Feb 2 at 21:45
Is it the snow right on the eye, or would snow mid-driveway also trigger it to open. Do you need to keep the entire path of the beam clear?
– Willk
Feb 2 at 21:45
Snow gathers right on the eye. The beam is fine, but when the eye gets covered it breaks the beam and causes the door to remain open. Its the safety feature. I can set the doors to manual but if that beam is broke that door opens.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:08
Snow gathers right on the eye. The beam is fine, but when the eye gets covered it breaks the beam and causes the door to remain open. Its the safety feature. I can set the doors to manual but if that beam is broke that door opens.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:08
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
place the lower eye in a larger clear or windowed box with the window vertical or overhanging slightly.
Good idea, but the angle of the box would still allow snow to sit. What do u mean on the last part? Giving it a bit of overhang above the eye?
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:10
have the eye look out the side of the box
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:41
I see what u mean by angling the cover. But I don't know what u mean by having the eye look out the side of the box.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:56
the top of the box will accumulate snow, the side should be snow-free
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:59
1
need to keep snow from in front to the lens. could do a slant-end tube like cannoli but clear boxes are available off the shelf.
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 1:34
|
show 3 more comments
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
place the lower eye in a larger clear or windowed box with the window vertical or overhanging slightly.
Good idea, but the angle of the box would still allow snow to sit. What do u mean on the last part? Giving it a bit of overhang above the eye?
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:10
have the eye look out the side of the box
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:41
I see what u mean by angling the cover. But I don't know what u mean by having the eye look out the side of the box.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:56
the top of the box will accumulate snow, the side should be snow-free
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:59
1
need to keep snow from in front to the lens. could do a slant-end tube like cannoli but clear boxes are available off the shelf.
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 1:34
|
show 3 more comments
place the lower eye in a larger clear or windowed box with the window vertical or overhanging slightly.
Good idea, but the angle of the box would still allow snow to sit. What do u mean on the last part? Giving it a bit of overhang above the eye?
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:10
have the eye look out the side of the box
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:41
I see what u mean by angling the cover. But I don't know what u mean by having the eye look out the side of the box.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:56
the top of the box will accumulate snow, the side should be snow-free
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:59
1
need to keep snow from in front to the lens. could do a slant-end tube like cannoli but clear boxes are available off the shelf.
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 1:34
|
show 3 more comments
place the lower eye in a larger clear or windowed box with the window vertical or overhanging slightly.
place the lower eye in a larger clear or windowed box with the window vertical or overhanging slightly.
edited Feb 3 at 1:03
answered Feb 2 at 22:30
JasenJasen
73137
73137
Good idea, but the angle of the box would still allow snow to sit. What do u mean on the last part? Giving it a bit of overhang above the eye?
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:10
have the eye look out the side of the box
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:41
I see what u mean by angling the cover. But I don't know what u mean by having the eye look out the side of the box.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:56
the top of the box will accumulate snow, the side should be snow-free
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:59
1
need to keep snow from in front to the lens. could do a slant-end tube like cannoli but clear boxes are available off the shelf.
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 1:34
|
show 3 more comments
Good idea, but the angle of the box would still allow snow to sit. What do u mean on the last part? Giving it a bit of overhang above the eye?
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:10
have the eye look out the side of the box
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:41
I see what u mean by angling the cover. But I don't know what u mean by having the eye look out the side of the box.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:56
the top of the box will accumulate snow, the side should be snow-free
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:59
1
need to keep snow from in front to the lens. could do a slant-end tube like cannoli but clear boxes are available off the shelf.
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 1:34
Good idea, but the angle of the box would still allow snow to sit. What do u mean on the last part? Giving it a bit of overhang above the eye?
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:10
Good idea, but the angle of the box would still allow snow to sit. What do u mean on the last part? Giving it a bit of overhang above the eye?
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:10
have the eye look out the side of the box
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:41
have the eye look out the side of the box
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:41
I see what u mean by angling the cover. But I don't know what u mean by having the eye look out the side of the box.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:56
I see what u mean by angling the cover. But I don't know what u mean by having the eye look out the side of the box.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:56
the top of the box will accumulate snow, the side should be snow-free
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:59
the top of the box will accumulate snow, the side should be snow-free
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 0:59
1
1
need to keep snow from in front to the lens. could do a slant-end tube like cannoli but clear boxes are available off the shelf.
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 1:34
need to keep snow from in front to the lens. could do a slant-end tube like cannoli but clear boxes are available off the shelf.
– Jasen
Feb 3 at 1:34
|
show 3 more comments
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Is it the snow right on the eye, or would snow mid-driveway also trigger it to open. Do you need to keep the entire path of the beam clear?
– Willk
Feb 2 at 21:45
Snow gathers right on the eye. The beam is fine, but when the eye gets covered it breaks the beam and causes the door to remain open. Its the safety feature. I can set the doors to manual but if that beam is broke that door opens.
– Chad
Feb 3 at 0:08