An inspector who went into the crawlspace under my house used a low-slung, 4-wheeled cart to lie down on while he pushed himself around in that very low-clearance space. The wheels were maybe 5 or 6 inches in diameter. I want to get a cart like that myself but I can’t find any reference to one on google - probably because I can’t figure out what the cart is actually called.
What would this cart be called? Any idea where I could buy one?
Seems likely to be a creeper. Possibly something a little different than a mechanics creeper which has small wheels and is intended to be used on flat level surfaces. Perhaps something a little more specialized for crawlspaces is used. Try looking at the Grainger website to see what options they have.
Thanks, all. “Creeper” is promising; I’ll try googling with that. The inspector’s creeper had bigger and fatter wheels than the ones in the pics; an all-terrain creeper.
I’m having trouble imagining how a creeper would work in my crawlspace. There’s rough ground with gravel under there. Even a few shallow holes. I’ve been under there several times on my hands and knees running CAT-5 (Networking) and Coax for my tv. I quickly learned to wear elbow and knee pads before going under there to work. I’m lucky that my crawlspace has about 30 inches of headroom. It’s not that bad. I’ve been in tighter ones with only 18 inches headroom.
I have used a creeper in my driveway changing my oil in my van.
Yeah, I don’t think it would work in mine, either. The heating ducts are something you can barely wriggle around to get from one part to the other. Not to mention that the old phone company wiring and TV cable aren’t “installed” so much as messily strewn about. As long as it works, I’m leaving it alone, but I’d worry that the crawler would catch some of that loose cable and rip it out.
(The old phone wiring isn’t suitable for data, as I’ve been reminded by phone service guys. Old 4 strand twisted pair from when princess phones were a big thing. Somehow ADSL 2+ gets over it from the phone company demarc box on the side of the house to my router, with quite reasonable speed and stability.)