Cole & Scorch
Hey Cole, I’ve been itching to build a quick barricade that actually keeps the riff‑raff out. Think we can sketch a simple, solid design that still works in the heat of a street fight?
Sure thing. Grab a sturdy piece of plywood or metal, shape it into a low wall about two feet tall, and secure it with a few concrete blocks or a heavy metal frame. Add a small metal plate on top that can be locked or slid away when you need to move. Keep the joints tight, use a few bolts, and you’ll have a compact barrier that holds up under pressure without slowing you down.
Nice, that’s solid. Just make sure the bolts can snap on fast—no one’s got time for a wrench when the bad guys start pounding. And if you can slip a small latch in there for quick release, we’ll be ready to drop the wall in a split second. Keep it tight, keep it quick, and keep the people behind safe.
Got it. Use a quick‑set toggle bolt or a push‑to‑release cam bolt for each corner. Attach a small brass latch to the top plate—one hand can push it and the whole wall slides back on a short track. Keep the latch bolt short so it snaps into place with a tap, no tools needed. That way you lock it fast, and when the heat hits you can unlatch and lift the wall in a beat.
That’s the kind of quick‑fire setup I like. Just remember to test the latch a few times before the next raid—no one wants a wall that won’t budge when the heat comes. Lock it up, move fast, keep the crew safe.