Sujet : Moving a 40ft High Cube
De : none (at) *nospam* none.com99 (Bob La Londe)
Groupes : rec.crafts.metalworkingDate : 04. May 2025, 23:40:40
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
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A buddy of mine hauls containers from the coast and sells them locally. He picked up 3 for a customer and after he got back with the third one they decided they only wanted two right now. He offered it to me delivered for a couple hundred bucks less than the before delivery and tax price of the local yard full of ex border wall containers. I didn't take advantage of my buddy. I know what he pays for them.
The concrete slab behind my shop is where I want it, but it was completely full of scrap, so I had him drop it next to the slab on some timbers (old guard rail posts) that would leave it sitting above the slab.
I spent all day yesterday and most of the day today moving steel, old machinery, and trash. It even inspired me to put several large pieces in the dumpster that I had been keeping just in case. An old utility trailer body, an old DeWalt industrial radial arm saw the last of the steel bins full of stuff that came with the steel work bench John Apple gave me.
I thought I might be able to push the container onto the slab with my little tractor, but that just wasn't working. I'd push one end in and the other would swing out. I kind of expected that. At about 8500 lbs it far exceeds the 750 rated load of the tractor bucket, so lifting one end and carrying it into place was definitely out.
I ran a chain through the foot on the container, ran another chain around the safety bollard (concrete filled six inch well casing) by my rear overhead door and stuck a come-a-long in between the two chains. Doubled up of course. With the chains and cable anchoring one end I can bump the other end with the tractor buck and it moves several inches. With the tractor up against the container at that end, the tires spun down into the dirt, the bucket dug in, and the parking brake on I can move the end with the chains an inch or two at a stroke with the come-a-long. It feels like the more of the weight that is on the concrete the easier it gets. By that I mean it feels the same, but my arms are getting weaker and I can still move it so...
I've got it about half way in the slab right now. Had to take a break and get some water. Well that's enough screwing around. Back to work.
-- Bob La LondeCNC Molds N Stuff-- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG antivirus software.www.avg.com