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Location: CinDay
Worst thing they can do is cook ya and eat ya
GW
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Location: Lewiston, NY
If you plan on doing this regularly a trolley mounted to the ceiling joists with a hoist would be a good option.
John
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I pretty much do all my work myself with the help of Johnny (3320 32hp compact utility tractor with loader) and some QA pallet forks. Also have a manual pallet jack, and a couple kinds of hoists, a come along, and an engine lift. Johnny will do 1000lbs at 8' high at the end of the tines. Someday Ill have a true proper fudge truck.
Glad its my shop I am responsible for - I only have to make me happy.
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Location: Long Island, NY
Which ever method you choose, I think you're trickiest part will be transitioning from leaning against the wall and horizontal, whether its onto saw horses or in slings from a hoist. The thing that's nice about electric hoists is the go up AND down in a controlled manner. Hydraulic jacks tend to drop quickly. I have one for my motorcycle, and lowering it after doing work is usually a bit of a sphincter puckering job, but I've never had a mishap luckily. I think you're next trickiest thing is going to be getting slings around a slab leaning against the wall securely. So I'd rest them on some 2X stock so you can fish slings under them!
Benny
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Location: Ra-cha-cha, NY
My personal preference would be for a beam trolley and manual chain hoist (not chain come-along), but that limits you to travel in one horizontal direction plus vertical. It also requires a beam, which may be a no-starter depending on the shop. If you have one already, perhaps a rolling cart you can put under the hoisted load would work, unless you can position the machines you need under the hook.
I have a 2T engine hoist, and it's very useful in my garage (I even use a long boom extension and counterweights sometimes), but my basement shop is way too small, so I use a cheap come-along from either a wooden beam over my utility bench, or the steel beam that's holding the house up. The cheap come-along is ok for how little I use it for hoisting, and the low overhead clearance, but for a bigger space, a chain hoist would be better.
And as bennybmn admonished, watch that transition. Rig it just above the CG when the piece is leaning against the wall, so a half-ton piece doesn't flop down and squish someone. If you're not sure where the CG is, sneak up on it by slinging it high and giving it a try. Better to have to horse the heavy end up a little to level it than to have it flatten itself unexpectedly, stopping when it hits something (or someone) in the process.
Tom
“This place smells like that odd combination of flop sweat, hopelessness, aaaand feet"
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Gantry crane. Problem solved.