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Ignoramus16807 March 22nd 15 03:45 PM

Machinery rollers/skates
 
I have several machinery skates/rollers, such as the one pictured
he

http://www.hevihaul.com/dollies/prod...-um-hd-50.cmsx

While they roll and handle the weight, they have two problems:

1) They are impossible to turn while loaded.

2) Even small obstacles (say a 1/4" bolt) get them stuck and stopped.

I am aware of, but do not have, carerpillar style Hilman rollers, such
as these ones:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/381025318979

I would like to know if anyone used such rollers. Do they allow a turn
during move, under load? Are they any better at handling small bumps
and obstacles?

thanks

i


Ned Simmons March 22nd 15 04:25 PM

Machinery rollers/skates
 
On Sun, 22 Mar 2015 10:45:35 -0500, Ignoramus16807
wrote:

I have several machinery skates/rollers, such as the one pictured
he

http://www.hevihaul.com/dollies/prod...-um-hd-50.cmsx

While they roll and handle the weight, they have two problems:

1) They are impossible to turn while loaded.

2) Even small obstacles (say a 1/4" bolt) get them stuck and stopped.

I am aware of, but do not have, carerpillar style Hilman rollers, such
as these ones:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/381025318979

I would like to know if anyone used such rollers. Do they allow a turn
during move, under load? Are they any better at handling small bumps
and obstacles?

thanks

i


I used the Hilman rollers a lot 35 years ago to move sailboats up to
45 feet and 15 tons. The individual rollers are quite small, so do not
handle rough floors or obstructions well at all.

They will turn under load if you can position them where you can get
the handle in a usable orientation. Note that the handle only attaches
front and back, which means that unless you can put the rollers at the
end of the load, the handle is going to be parallel and low to the
floor. I modified a set with a side attachment for the handle, which
made them much more convenient to use. But you'll still get in
situations where there's no clearance around the load to use the
handle.

They also seem to be more prone to getting knocked out of alignment
than the Hevi-Haul rollers you pointed to, and thus require more
attention while the load is moving.

My main customer is constantly shuffling large machinery within their
plant, and they use the Hevi-Haul type.

Having used both, I prefer the Hevi-Haul.

--
Ned Simmons

Ignoramus16807 March 22nd 15 05:27 PM

Machinery rollers/skates
 
On 2015-03-22, Ned Simmons wrote:
On Sun, 22 Mar 2015 10:45:35 -0500, Ignoramus16807
wrote:

I have several machinery skates/rollers, such as the one pictured
he

http://www.hevihaul.com/dollies/prod...-um-hd-50.cmsx

While they roll and handle the weight, they have two problems:

1) They are impossible to turn while loaded.

2) Even small obstacles (say a 1/4" bolt) get them stuck and stopped.

I am aware of, but do not have, carerpillar style Hilman rollers, such
as these ones:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/381025318979

I would like to know if anyone used such rollers. Do they allow a turn
during move, under load? Are they any better at handling small bumps
and obstacles?

thanks

i


I used the Hilman rollers a lot 35 years ago to move sailboats up to
45 feet and 15 tons. The individual rollers are quite small, so do not
handle rough floors or obstructions well at all.

They will turn under load if you can position them where you can get
the handle in a usable orientation. Note that the handle only attaches
front and back, which means that unless you can put the rollers at the
end of the load, the handle is going to be parallel and low to the
floor. I modified a set with a side attachment for the handle, which
made them much more convenient to use. But you'll still get in
situations where there's no clearance around the load to use the
handle.

They also seem to be more prone to getting knocked out of alignment
than the Hevi-Haul rollers you pointed to, and thus require more
attention while the load is moving.

My main customer is constantly shuffling large machinery within their
plant, and they use the Hevi-Haul type.

Having used both, I prefer the Hevi-Haul.


OK, thanks, this was very useful.

i


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