Have I told you recently that you suck?Afraid I scooped these, folks.
Congrats!
Have I told you recently that you suck?Afraid I scooped these, folks.
Have people had much luck with tow truck companies, for machinery moving? I called around a few years ago, and they were: a) confused, or b) aghast. Hardly gave me the time of day.
Hmm. Spec sheet for the First LC 1 1/2 from Long Chang Machinery says 2222 lbs (1010kg).
I have a First LC 1-1/2 TM and I can say I'm pleased with how it's built and that I can still order parts if I ever need. From what I read, the First mills are well thought of. 1010 kg is about right. @Susquatch I don't know what the 1 1/2 refers to, the LC 1-1/2 family came with 2 & 3 HP, my TM is a 2, maybe some important dimension was 1.5 meters?
My First 9X49 mill weighs just over 3800 lbs - so I assume the new ones are a little lighter (Hienmann machinery says they weigh just over 1000 Kg)
To move the mill, save yourself a lot of headache - remove the head if you can. If the vendor is willing, you can take the whole ram and head assembly off all at once, buy removing the bolts on the spider, below the turret. This takes 5-10 minutes, but you need an engine crane or forklift to handle the 450lbs assembly.
If you do this, the mill is now a lot less tippy, and now your heaviest piece is about 1500 lbs - a lot safer to move (ask me how I know )
3800 is more in line with what I had heard. Thanks for that. Now I know I'm not crazy. Well, maybe just not as crazy as I feared.
Someday I may have to break, down, and learn about all their different models. Firsts are held in very high regard around here.
Fantastic, didn’t someone say “everything will work out if you let it”Happily, it turns out they do have a forklift at their end, and are perfectly willing to load the machines.
I've never been a car guy, but when I see a little truck with a crane, I think 'I could move so much stuff!'@Stuart Samuel When I had my First delivered, the step that worked was a local mini-crane operator. Had a little HIAB-like think that could squeeze up my narrow driveway and drop it in front of my garage door, directly on the rollers I used to move it the rest of the way. Totally worth the $300.
Uh-huh...Now I know I'm not crazy.
Uh-huh...
That was a tight squeeze for my old Tacoma, so that must have been a really little HIAB. lolHad a little HIAB-like think that could squeeze up my narrow driveway
Thanks for that clarification Dave. IMHO, such things should be somewhat of a standard so one can look at a model number and know the basic details. Like a LEE 612 surface grinder has a 6x12 vise. Or a 1440 Lathe has a 14" Swing and a 40 inch bed. But I guess that's all just wishful thinking on my part.
Glad you were able to help with factual information. Nothing beats hard data from an actual user.
As a business, HST is the part that pisses me off the most.