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Dave Rosner
09-16-2018, 7:43 PM
What do you folks use when moving things around? I’ve got a big heavy drill press and I need to relocate it about 20 feet or so. I guess I could do the rocking “walk” but figured I could get a hand truck or something that would be easier and have other uses.

Just curious how others tackle this...

Eugene Dixon
09-16-2018, 7:52 PM
Moved a 50 gun safe a couple of years ago using some 1" pvc pipe as rollers. It was empty though. :D

Jon Snider
09-16-2018, 8:24 PM
Other than black pipe, another option is a Johnson bar and machinery skates.

Alao, engine hoist can be used.

sean meltvedt
09-16-2018, 8:42 PM
This Has worked well for my equipment that isn’t on its own rolling base:




, engine hoist can be used.

Mark Hennebury
09-16-2018, 8:43 PM
Give me a lever long enough....


I have a bunch of heavy stuff, several up to 8000 lbs that i move with a lever and a few 3/4" mdf pads, very slowly and very carefully.

Tall machines are dangerous and can easily tip. Wrestling with tall machines can hurt... got the Tee-shirt.

I have a pallet jack for the lighter stuff.

If i had a nice flat shop floor i would get air floats.

Dave Rosner
09-16-2018, 9:08 PM
Was thinking of buying a hand truck that can handle 600 lbs. just not sure if my top heavy drill press will work with that...

Jim Andrew
09-16-2018, 9:25 PM
I use a long flat bar to get the machine up, then use a dolly or some pieces of pipe to roll the machine around.

Warren Lake
09-16-2018, 10:11 PM
Have a pry bar and it was a gift used from a friend. Its some kind of steel maybe a Samurai guy made it. I can move 2,500lbs half inch at a time along the floor fairly easily just by prying. I do sometimes leave a trail though depending on what the floor is.

Mike Henderson
09-17-2018, 8:21 AM
Was thinking of buying a hand truck that can handle 600 lbs. just not sure if my top heavy drill press will work with that...

For something top heavy like a drill press, I'd use an engine hoist.

Mike

Wayne Lomman
09-17-2018, 8:37 AM
Engine hoist for a tall narrow machine like this or some similar device to lift from the top. Anything underneath is high risk to machine and personnel. Cheers

Edward Weingarden
09-17-2018, 9:33 AM
I recently moved so a number of items needed to be relocated. I bought a hand truck...$70 very well spent. For my drill press, I took the motor off because of it being top heavy. The base and post were moved easily with the hand truck, as was the motor, and then the motor reinstalled.

I've used the hand truck to move stone slabs, logs for woodturning, and the list goes on. Invest in one; you won't be sorry.

Bill Dufour
09-17-2018, 9:41 AM
Moving a drill press lower the table all the way then lower the head at least half way down.
They really should be tied down in place so they do not tip over.
Bill D

Tom Bender
09-17-2018, 11:13 AM
A hand truck is ok but it can be hard to tie a DP to it. Then it's still a challenge to move around other obstructions.

Make a plywood sled that you can tie a rope to. Slip it underneath. Then get a friend or two to help study and drag it.

Bill Dufour
09-17-2018, 7:27 PM
The real answer is machinery skates but that is really too much cost for lightweight machines as used in a woodshop. Anything under one ton they are overkill for a level move. Maybe rol-a-lifts might work? Problem is a drillpress has no cabinet to attach lifting equipment to. You will have to bolt it to. pallet then attach the rol-a-lift to the pallet.
A attached d alink to the 3 ton version yo udo not need anywhere near that much capacity
Bil lD.

https://www.sunbeltrentals.com/equipment/detail/1218/0440080/3-ton-roll-a-lift/

https://www.rolalift.com/RAL/Products.html (https://www.sunbeltrentals.com/equipment/detail/1218/0440080/3-ton-roll-a-lift/)

liam c murphy
09-18-2018, 8:59 PM
I keep my bandsaw and planer on custom pallets. They each weigh around 800lbs. I use a pallet jack to move them around almost daily.

John Christian
09-21-2018, 11:00 AM
i used to live near my two very large and strong sons. now i use a shop crane( engine hoist) my beer tab is lower.

Halgeir Wold
09-21-2018, 12:41 PM
This a fact - not a joke!!! I've moved a large mill and a big metal lathe ( not alone, though) with this old method:
Get a large piece of bacon, cut the rind of leaving a fair amount of fat to the rind. Cut into four pieces and place one piece under each corner - and move along!
Works a charm on solid floors like concrete......

Paul Lawrence
09-22-2018, 5:26 AM
I don't remember all the details, but my father was smarter than me. He lifted a heavy milling machine up and installed an "adapted" 4x4 sheet (3/4 doubled up) under the machine.

The adaptation he made was to install 5 threaded flanges into the plywood where he screwed in quick-disconnect male air couplings. Yeah.

Aired it up with a 6-way manifold and slid it where ever he wanted it to be; usually in the bay where his truck parked and back. It helped that it was on a concrete floor.

Phillip Gregory
09-22-2018, 7:54 AM
What do you folks use when moving things around? I’ve got a big heavy drill press and I need to relocate it about 20 feet or so. I guess I could do the rocking “walk” but figured I could get a hand truck or something that would be easier and have other uses.

Just curious how others tackle this...

I moved a 600 pound drill press into my shop last year. Here's how I did it.

1. Removed the motor, guard, belts, chuck, and starter from the head, that lightened the load by about 100 lbs.
2. Lowered the table all of the way down
3. Lowered the head as far down as it would go.
4. Used a hand truck to wheel it out of the back of my pickup, down ramps, through the shop, and into its current location.

Removing anything that will come off and lowering the table and head are the keys here, hand trucks work much better with compact pieces of equipment rather than something tall and tippy.

Tom Bender
09-22-2018, 2:48 PM
Phillip
You used a hand truck to roll a 500 pound load down off your pickup truck on ramps???

Phillip Gregory
09-22-2018, 10:17 PM
Yes, I did. It went fine.

Warren Lake
09-22-2018, 11:15 PM
I dont see that safety wise or a need for it but maybe your ramps were different than mine. I slide an SCM saw 1,300 lbs down maple ramps and had a block and tackle on it, if I didnt it would have flown on its own. Maybe because it was hard maple there was alot more tendency to slide on that material.

Phillip Gregory
09-23-2018, 8:10 AM
I use a pair of steel ATV ramps that have perforations at the top that provide a good amount of grip. 1300 pounds is a LOT more weight than 500 pounds and I would have used a chainfall to lift a 1300 pound load out of my truck. The heaviest thing I took down ramps was my radial arm saw, it was strapped to a pallet and I slowly walked it down the ramps. It was not sliding anywhere. The saw less the table and motor but plus the pallet was probably 650 pounds.

Warren Lake
09-23-2018, 11:11 AM
you said hand truck, I thought Pallet Jack. I used a fridge dolly to move a drill press around, strapped on its easy to do.

Phillip Gregory
09-23-2018, 7:40 PM
you said hand truck, I thought Pallet Jack. I used a fridge dolly to move a drill press around, strapped on its easy to do.

I have not heard the term "fridge dolly" but apparently it is a synonym to a hand truck and that is typically the piece of equipment people use to move a refrigerator around.

Tom Bender
09-26-2018, 8:00 PM
A fridge dolly is a tall hand truck with a ratchet strap to secure the load.