When a 15hp Cazeneuve hydraulic pattern lathe -- functional
but being retired -- arrived on a low trailer, I moved it off the trailer
and into my shop using a 10' 12" i-beam, many short 2by4s to stack
on each side, and an ordinary floor jack to lift the lathe, slide the
trailer out from under it, and lower it onto some 2-ton dollies built for
the event. Same setup was used again to get the lathe onto the floor. And
yeah, if that forklift wasn't so expensive to rent....
Tom Harrison
At 2022-11-05 06:05, Paul Amaranth wrote:
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
I'm in the process of moving my
shop about 100 miles.? It's quite
possible to do this by yourself with some thought and the right
equipment.? Forklifts make life very easy, but are not
essential
(although if you can get one, do it).
I'm using skates, a toe jack, a johnson bar and a drop deck trailer
and
just moved a mill yesterday.? I use a chainfall to pull the
machine
up onto the trailer deck and then chain it down with binders and add
a couple ratchet straps for good measure.? If you're carrying a
load
you want it to be part of the trailer.? I once saw a trailer
carrying
a backhoe flipped over and the backhoe was still attached even
though
it was upside down.? I try to ensure anything I'm towing is
fastened
similarly.
You need a proper vehicle though.? I've carried 3000 pounds
lathes
in the bed of my dually pickup without issues.? Towing 5 or 6
thousand pounds gross weight is not an issue either.
Or, just look for a local rigger and use the universal tool: money.
Sit back and watch them take care of it.? I had a machine moved
cross country and the local rigger took care of it from the trucking
terminal to my shop.? I just pointed to where it should sit.
Didn't even break a sweat :-)
Do make sure the rigger is insured and reputable.? I once had
a guy drop a 3000 pound lathe 3 feet onto asphalt when his strap
slipped (no damage, although the asphalt gave a little).? At
least it didn't slip when it was 6 feet in the air.
? Paul
On Fri, Nov 04, 2022 at 05:27:12PM -0700, Tom Harrison wrote:
> Last time I bought a large piece (an Eagle 400 mill), the seller
arranged
> for the truck to deliver it, and I arranged to rent a large forklift
to
> remove it from the truck. I was surprised that the delivery of the
forklift
> did not include OPERATING the forklift, but the driver WOULD explain
best
> practices (like, DO NOT LIFT FROM THE BOTTOM, but instead use the
mill top
> lift point). He explained the controls, because I had never driven a
fork
> lift before, and this unit had to be carefully moved deep into my
shop barn.
> End result? No problem, no damage, nothing knocked over, didn't fall
into
> the 6' maintenance pit, etc. All went fine. Total moving cost,
across town,
> less than $700, not counting my nervous sweat.
>
> You can do it. Just ask a lot of questions, and go slow.
>
> Tom Harrison
>
> At 2022-11-04 06:45, Tim Goldstein wrote:
> >You can have equipment like this shipped without crating. I have
done it a
> >number of times. On the recipient end contact some of your local
rigging
> >companies and tell them you are looking to have a piece of
equipment
> >shipped to you. The ones who can arrange for this will want to
know what
> >the item is, where it is coming from, where it is going to, and
details
> >such as type of facility (appears to be residential on both
ends), if
> >there is a loading dock at either end, if there is equipment to
load and
> >unload the machinery on both ends, etc. I am guessing you could
use a
> >rigging company on the senders end, but I have always used a
rigger local
> >to me as it was easier to work with and know they are
reputable.Tim G
> >
> >Autistic, He/Him/His
> >
>
><
> >
> >Neurodiverse Communication Specialist ? Emotional Speaking
> >
> >Author - Speaker - Trainer - Consultant - Vocal Coach
> >
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> !DSPAM:6365a6da136852094117384!
--
Paul Amaranth,
GCIH????????????
| Manchester MI,
USA?????????????
Aurora Group of Michigan, LLC?? |?? Security, Systems
& Software
paul@...?????????????
|?? Unix/Linux - We don't do windows