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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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Gentlemen,
Early next week I will depart on a 580 mile odyssey to fetch home my new bridgeport mill. Thanks to Iggy (Thanks, Iggy!!!) I have a copy of a bridgeport operation and maintenance manual. The manual contains some illustrations and guidance on UNPACKING a mill. I get the impression that this manual was printed for british consumption. First, it mentions a Whitworth 3/4" J hook that screws into the top of the head to be used as a lifting lug. Second, the manual uses the word "whilst" and other distinctly british spellings. But the machines were indeed manufactured in Bridgeport, Connecticut... yes? I have not yet resolved how to get the machine home. Plan A involves me towing an 18' pintle hitch trailer behind our old 1 ton Ford diesel van. The trailer is purpose built for moving backhoes. It is a very stout trailer. With a backhoe on it, the trailer would be too heavy for the Ford. But with a 2200 mill and 800 pound welder the gross weight will be about 8,000 lbs, which I consider well within the capacity of the 1 ton van. The van has fully steel belted, commercial duty tires on it. The trailer has tandem axles and dual wheels all around. I recently bought the trailer and we re-wired it. This will be our first major trip with it. Since it is an older trailer (1989?) this afternoon I took it to Gary's, my tractor mechanic's, house for him to inspect, service, and/or repair, as needed. Today Gary rebuilt the tilt cylinders in my Case forklift which were hemorrhaging hydraulic fluid. In short order he had the kits in, a hydraulic oil change, and the forklift working like a champ. It is a Case 584CK. It will lift 4,000 pounds 22 feet into the air. This means I could drop the mill through the roof if I chose to do so... ah, the powah!!! By Monday afternoon, Gary will make a pronouncement as to whether the trailer is seaworthy. If so, I will depart Monday night or Tuesday to pick up the mill. If Gary finds any serious problems that can't be fixed within 24 hours I will go to "Plan B". This involves renting a Ryder truck. Thus, I am confronting two possible scenarios for loading the equipment and returning home with it. If I take the pintle hitch trailer I intend to load the two items squarely over the axles. I will drill holes through the floor of the trailer and bolt the mill down with four 1/2" carriage bolts or something similar. I will even use angle iron "stringers" as needed beneath the trailer to ensure that the mill is tight as a fiddle bow. I will also strap and chain it. If I take a Ryder truck however, I'm less certain as to how to secure the machine. Those trucks have aluminum boxes with steel stanchions every 4 feet or so. Along the sides, about 36" from the floor, are some 1x4 smooth wooden rails. These do not seem very sturdy to me. Also, I probably will catch grief from drilling holes in the floor of the truck. Also, even though the trucks have tommy lifts, I will still have to roll the machine some 20 feet forward into the cavernous box of the truck. Is it a viable plan to set the thing down on a pallet jack? I'm not sure the foot print of the mill is even big enough to catch the legs of the jack. Once I get there, the seller will load me. But then they will wash their hands and close the door. I have moved things this heavy. But not this "concentrated" and not with this high of a center of gravity. Therefore, I will welcome the benefit of the experience of those who have been through the drill previously. As always, thanks! V |
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