(09-14-2017, 08:18 PM)Mike Brady Wrote: I have a friend who wants to take his basement shop equipment to a new home a couple of states away. He has been told that it is cheaper (or a wash) to sell and repurchase equipment rather than pay for the moving company to pack and transport the shop to the destination. He was also warned not to move fragile items during summer months because the personnel are often temp hires in the peak season and they aren't careful or experienced. Anyone have some experience or expertise in moving shops?
I just moved a few months ago. It was a 9 hour move from CA or OR. My tools are not small. I had to haul a Minimax MM16 bandsaw, PM66 with the long rails, a 6-foot long 8" jointer, 15" stationary planer, a top heavy floor-standing drill press, shelves, wood, hand tools, and so on.
I hired professional movers for my household goods, but not so the tools. I rented a UHaul, got a buddy to help me load it up, and drove it myself. It can be done with a little patience, a furniture dolly, a lot of ratchet straps (used as a safety net while running big tools up the ramp, and for securing them to the van) and a lot less muscle power than you probably imagine. Lever and nudge the big tools up onto a dolly, roll them up the ramp, and off you go. Seriously. It was more time consuming than difficult.
One tip: I made a full length cradle that I strapped onto the spine of my MM16, with casters on the top end. Moved the saw upright until it was close, tipped it so that the cradle rested against the back edge of the van floor, levered the saw up and rolled it in along the floor. Stood it up again in seconds. It worked great!
I did partly disassemble the tablesaw (rails and extension/router table off), and jointer (removed the fence and tables). It was probably necessary for the TS. In retrospect, I might have left the jointer tables on.
On the receiving end, I hired a couple of local people (found on Craigslist) to help me and my buddy unload. That was mostly for speed, so we weren't there late annoying my new neighbors.
Highly recommended, and no (ahem) "pros" to damage things.
[EDIT] Bob10 talked me into it. He was right. But don't tell him.