Traditional Hangers & Supports ยท Supports & Hangers
Unistrut rack with multiple ducts
Shared corridor rack
ConnectionSupport method only
SupportMulti-tier strut rack
Before you start
- Confirm the approved support detail, actual duct weight, support spacing, attachment substrate, hardware size, corrosion protection, and any insulation, seismic, vibration, or rooftop requirements before installation.
- Confirm the engineered or approved rack layout, total combined load, tier spacing, service order, brace requirements, and attachment points.
- Verify who owns the rack design and whether future services are included.
- Inspect all rods, channels, fittings, anchors, and braces.
Tools and materials
Approved strut-rack components, threaded rods, anchors, fittings, braces, clamps or retainers, labels, level or laser, lift, installation tools, and isolation materials.
Lay it out
- Lay out every tier, service, access zone, and maintenance clearance.
- Place large or heavy ducts where the approved design shows them.
- Coordinate rack width and braces with structure and neighboring trades.
Set and support it
- Install the full rack frame before loading services.
- Level and square each tier.
- Complete required bracing before the rack is fully loaded.
Make the connection
- 1
Verify the approved component list and rack dimensions.
- 2
Install anchors, rods, and primary channels.
- 3
Install tiers and braces in the specified sequence.
- 4
Inspect and lock the empty rack.
- 5
Load the largest or heaviest ducts in the approved order.
- 6
Add clamps, retainers, separators, and labels.
- 7
Recheck level, deflection, and access after full loading.
Check the install
- The rack matches the approved layout and total load.
- Channels remain level and deflection is acceptable.
- Each duct is supported and restrained as required.
- Access to dampers, valves, and service points remains open.
- No unapproved future service has been added.
Common mistakes
- Field-designing the rack from whatever strut is available.
- Adding one more service after the rack is loaded.
- Blocking access with a brace or tier.
- Loading one side first and twisting the frame.
Stop and ask
Stop if the rack is being field-designed without approved load review, or if total load, bracing, attachment, or service arrangement is unclear.