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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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#1
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On Wed, 01 Sep 2004 03:04:21 GMT, Gunner
wrote: On Tue, 31 Aug 2004 15:59:08 -0400, "BW" wrote: I finally got moved into my new house and the machines are nestled into the garage. I have to move the lathe and bridgeport into the cellar. I have a walk-in door to the basement but the problem is getting the stuff to the door. There is about 40' of grass to move the stuff over. I moved the bridgeport head and table on a skid by using rollers under it. It was quite a job. I am leery of trying to move the base the same way. Any suggestions on moving the base ? There is not enough room to get a large machine in to carry it. Thanks, Bill W Two sheets of 3/4" plywood. Lay the far one under the one the mill is on. Push to the new sheet, remove the old one, pry up the far end, stick the new sheet under the one the mill is on, move to this sheet and repeat. Takes more time to explain than to do. Gunner If I can't come up with three sheets I look to zenith. The plywood prices are terrible . I use to get large counter tops from dumpster diving. Their particle board , but 3/4 and laminated on the other side. After 911 everyone seemed to stop making major screw ups. I'm sure NAFTA didn't help. |
#2
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Where are you located? I've got this new knuckle-boom I'm itchin' to
try out and my wife says I can't lift her car up with it! james, Port Orchard (seattle), Washington, USA, Earth On Wed, 01 Sep 2004 20:09:26 -0700, Sunworshipper wrote: On Wed, 01 Sep 2004 03:04:21 GMT, Gunner wrote: On Tue, 31 Aug 2004 15:59:08 -0400, "BW" wrote: I finally got moved into my new house and the machines are nestled into the garage. I have to move the lathe and bridgeport into the cellar. I have a walk-in door to the basement but the problem is getting the stuff to the door. There is about 40' of grass to move the stuff over. I moved the bridgeport head and table on a skid by using rollers under it. It was quite a job. I am leery of trying to move the base the same way. Any suggestions on moving the base ? There is not enough room to get a large machine in to carry it. Thanks, Bill W Two sheets of 3/4" plywood. Lay the far one under the one the mill is on. Push to the new sheet, remove the old one, pry up the far end, stick the new sheet under the one the mill is on, move to this sheet and repeat. Takes more time to explain than to do. Gunner If I can't come up with three sheets I look to zenith. The plywood prices are terrible . I use to get large counter tops from dumpster diving. Their particle board , but 3/4 and laminated on the other side. After 911 everyone seemed to stop making major screw ups. I'm sure NAFTA didn't help. |
#3
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On Thu, 02 Sep 2004 04:51:40 -0700, RainLover
wrote: Where are you located? I've got this new knuckle-boom I'm itchin' to try out and my wife says I can't lift her car up with it! Is that Can't (as in 'NO, and that's FINAL!'), or Can't (as in 'You don't have the proper straps, rigging and spreader bars yet, you might scratch the paint Honey Dear...')? If it was the second answer, does she have a single sister? ;-P -- Bruce -- -- Bruce L. Bergman, Woodland Hills (Los Angeles) CA - Desktop Electrician for Westend Electric - CA726700 5737 Kanan Rd. #359, Agoura CA 91301 (818) 889-9545 Spamtrapped address: Remove the python and the invalid, and use a net. |
#4
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Sorry, I am in Massachusetts.
The plywood sounds good. I've got the base on a new skid that I built and I'll get the plywood today and give it a go. Thanks, BW "RainLover" wrote in message ... Where are you located? I've got this new knuckle-boom I'm itchin' to try out and my wife says I can't lift her car up with it! james, Port Orchard (seattle), Washington, USA, Earth On Wed, 01 Sep 2004 20:09:26 -0700, Sunworshipper wrote: On Wed, 01 Sep 2004 03:04:21 GMT, Gunner wrote: On Tue, 31 Aug 2004 15:59:08 -0400, "BW" wrote: I finally got moved into my new house and the machines are nestled into the garage. I have to move the lathe and bridgeport into the cellar. I have a walk-in door to the basement but the problem is getting the stuff to the door. There is about 40' of grass to move the stuff over. I moved the bridgeport head and table on a skid by using rollers under it. It was quite a job. I am leery of trying to move the base the same way. Any suggestions on moving the base ? There is not enough room to get a large machine in to carry it. Thanks, Bill W Two sheets of 3/4" plywood. Lay the far one under the one the mill is on. Push to the new sheet, remove the old one, pry up the far end, stick the new sheet under the one the mill is on, move to this sheet and repeat. Takes more time to explain than to do. Gunner If I can't come up with three sheets I look to zenith. The plywood prices are terrible . I use to get large counter tops from dumpster diving. Their particle board , but 3/4 and laminated on the other side. After 911 everyone seemed to stop making major screw ups. I'm sure NAFTA didn't help. |
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RainLover wrote:
Where are you located? I've got this new knuckle-boom I'm itchin' to try out and my wife says I can't lift her car up with it! Come on over to Issaquah! I'm moving in about a month and I've got a lathe that prolly weighs more than your wife's car that needs to be stuffed into a truck or something.. Oh, and here's the secret phrase you must learn in dealing with your wife on these matters: "Hey, what can go wrong?!" Sometimes, this is followed shortly thereafter with another magical, secret phrase: "Hey, who knew?!" ;-) -- Doug http://www.des.indianchief.com/index.htm |
#6
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On Thu, 02 Sep 2004 16:13:15 GMT, Doug Smith
wrote: RainLover wrote: Where are you located? I've got this new knuckle-boom I'm itchin' to try out and my wife says I can't lift her car up with it! Come on over to Issaquah! I'm moving in about a month and I've got a lathe that prolly weighs more than your wife's car that needs to be stuffed into a truck or something.. Oh, and here's the secret phrase you must learn in dealing with your wife on these matters: "Hey, what can go wrong?!" Sometimes, this is followed shortly thereafter with another magical, secret phrase: "Hey, who knew?!" ;-) "hey, hold my beer and watch this!" Gunner "In my humble opinion, the petty carping levied against Bush by the Democrats proves again, it is better to have your eye plucked out by an eagle than to be nibbled to death by ducks." - Norman Liebmann |
#7
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Gunner wrote:
"hey, hold my beer and watch this!" NO! Never give up yer beer! Nothing good can come of this. I once fell down an entire flight of stairs without spilling a drop. Got a standing ovation from an admiring crowd for that one.. Of course, I was considerably younger then. Now, I'd probably get all banged up and stuff. Still wouldn't spill any beer tho.. They can take my beer when they can peel my cold dead fingers from around the can. ;-) -- Doug http://www.des.indianchief.com/index.htm |
#8
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On Thu, 02 Sep 2004 16:13:15 GMT, Doug Smith
wrote: RainLover wrote: Where are you located? I've got this new knuckle-boom I'm itchin' to try out and my wife says I can't lift her car up with it! Come on over to Issaquah! I'm moving in about a month and I've got a lathe that prolly weighs more than your wife's car that needs to be stuffed into a truck or something.. Oh, and here's the secret phrase you must learn in dealing with your wife on these matters: "Hey, what can go wrong?!" Sometimes, this is followed shortly thereafter with another magical, secret phrase: "Hey, who knew?!" ;-) Don't tell me, you Consider the Red Green show to be a Religion? LOL I'd move it, but you'd have to pay for gas and ferry to get me there and back! What's your guess on its weight? James, Port Orchard. |
#9
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RainLover wrote:
...snippage... Don't tell me, you Consider the Red Green show to be a Religion? LOL Heh.. I have seen that show a few times and it has always made me laugh out loud. ...snippage... I'd move it, but you'd have to pay for gas and ferry to get me there and back! What's your guess on its weight? Oh, I'd gladly pay more than that. I'm looking at a 24' truck with lift gate -- gotta see how much that lift gate can lift. If not enough (and I expect it won't be) I might just take you up on that! Weight is 3,000 lbs for the lathe. The other tools are all sub-1000 pounders and, hence, no problem even for the lift gate thang. Jeez, I kinda dread this move. What an ordeal. But the end result will be worth it.. -- Doug http://www.des.indianchief.com/index.htm |
#10
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On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 06:29:27 GMT, Doug Smith
wrote: RainLover wrote: ...snippage... Don't tell me, you Consider the Red Green show to be a Religion? LOL Heh.. I have seen that show a few times and it has always made me laugh out loud. ...snippage... I'd move it, but you'd have to pay for gas and ferry to get me there and back! What's your guess on its weight? Oh, I'd gladly pay more than that. I'm looking at a 24' truck with lift gate -- gotta see how much that lift gate can lift. If not enough (and I expect it won't be) I might just take you up on that! Weight is 3,000 lbs for the lathe. The other tools are all sub-1000 pounders and, hence, no problem even for the lift gate thang. Jeez, I kinda dread this move. What an ordeal. But the end result will be worth it.. Well, I usually charge $50/hour for me and the truck (plus ferry but fuel is included) I can lift 7,000 lbs up close and I'm not sure what the knuckle boom can lift 20' out, but if I can get close enough to your equipment I should be able to pick and set it on a truck easily... if you're not moving too far, we could strap them all to my truck and make moving IN at the new place a breeze.... Think of it as being a patron of the arts since I'm just trying to help pay for the truck that moves my sculpture around... James, Port Orchard |
#11
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#12
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Hey Doug... I got your email but " seems to be
invalid... if you send me another email, try a REAL address. :-) James, Port Orchard. On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 06:29:27 GMT, Doug Smith wrote: RainLover wrote: ...snippage... Don't tell me, you Consider the Red Green show to be a Religion? LOL Heh.. I have seen that show a few times and it has always made me laugh out loud. ...snippage... I'd move it, but you'd have to pay for gas and ferry to get me there and back! What's your guess on its weight? Oh, I'd gladly pay more than that. I'm looking at a 24' truck with lift gate -- gotta see how much that lift gate can lift. If not enough (and I expect it won't be) I might just take you up on that! Weight is 3,000 lbs for the lathe. The other tools are all sub-1000 pounders and, hence, no problem even for the lift gate thang. Jeez, I kinda dread this move. What an ordeal. But the end result will be worth it.. |
#13
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I know .. he did that to me lately recently too. Not even a link on his
Web page .. dude does NOT like spam, can't blame him. Me, I handle putting email addy's out on the Web thusly: http://www.tinyisland.com/email.html I still get spam, though. Grant RainLover wrote: Hey Doug... I got your email but " seems to be invalid... if you send me another email, try a REAL address. :-) James, Port Orchard. On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 06:29:27 GMT, Doug Smith wrote: RainLover wrote: ...snippage... Don't tell me, you Consider the Red Green show to be a Religion? LOL Heh.. I have seen that show a few times and it has always made me laugh out loud. ...snippage... I'd move it, but you'd have to pay for gas and ferry to get me there and back! What's your guess on its weight? Oh, I'd gladly pay more than that. I'm looking at a 24' truck with lift gate -- gotta see how much that lift gate can lift. If not enough (and I expect it won't be) I might just take you up on that! Weight is 3,000 lbs for the lathe. The other tools are all sub-1000 pounders and, hence, no problem even for the lift gate thang. Jeez, I kinda dread this move. What an ordeal. But the end result will be worth it.. |
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