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-   -   How do you move boatanchors around? (https://www.radiobanter.com/boatanchors/73973-how-do-you-move-boatanchors-around.html)

Ed July 4th 05 09:07 AM

How do you move boatanchors around?
 
I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more. How do you move them around the shack from
work bench to work station for repair and operation, by yourself?
Thanks,
Ed



K3HVG July 4th 05 10:46 AM

Ed, Although I can still move many of my vintage BA's via "personal
mobility", I have a flat-top work cart that's a bit more than desk
height. I transfer to the cart, then to the bench. Beats the heck out
of trying to horse an R-390A around. Similar carts are available from
Harbor Freight. Look for one without the raised sides, though.. that's
the key.


Ed wrote:

I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more. How do you move them around the shack from
work bench to work station for repair and operation, by yourself?
Thanks,
Ed




John Mackesy July 4th 05 11:00 AM

Ed wrote:
I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more. How do you move them around the shack from
work bench to work station for repair and operation, by yourself?
Thanks,
Ed


I get my wife to help me - 6 feet tall, 185 pounds.

John Mackesy VK3XAO

Odo Of Bayeux July 4th 05 12:40 PM

On Mon, 4 Jul 2005 03:07:15 -0500, "Ed" none@this-time wrote:

I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more. How do you move them around the shack from
work bench to work station for repair and operation, by yourself?
Thanks,
Ed


Simple - use a sky hook...

[email protected] July 4th 05 02:06 PM

I never work on a bench ,I work on a roll around table about same
height as work bench..you can drag the BA`s from work cart to table
etc.It is a big help in getting the BA from my vehicle into the shop
also..Pick up one corner of BA and spin it around to load and un
load..No strain...Harold W4PQW


Randy or Sherry Guttery July 4th 05 03:27 PM

Ed wrote:
I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more.


Even in my younger days, since most of my radios weigh as much as I do -
(since I'm around 100 pounds myself) this has always been an issue.
While he's often a PITA; that's one of the main reasons I keep Randy
around: he's still useful as "gorilla" - ah - er "crane"! ;).

Seriously - a sturdy cart about the right height to "slide" 390s, AR88s,
RAO-6's, ART13s and such to and from tables, the work bench, etc. is a
must. Equally seriously - recruiting help when moving the big ones goes
from being a convenience - to a necessity.
--
Sherry

Ed Price July 4th 05 06:09 PM


"K3HVG" wrote in message
...
Ed, Although I can still move many of my vintage BA's via "personal
mobility", I have a flat-top work cart that's a bit more than desk height.
I transfer to the cart, then to the bench. Beats the heck out of trying to
horse an R-390A around. Similar carts are available from Harbor Freight.
Look for one without the raised sides, though.. that's the key.


Ed wrote:

I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more. How do you move them around the shack from
work bench to work station for repair and operation, by yourself?
Thanks,
Ed



It also helps to use a "slide-sheet", like the nurses do in a hospital. I
use an old anti-static mat; it's nice to have on my bench when I venture out
of the BA realm. But it's also thick, big and tough enough to let me slide a
BA on it from a cart to my bench. And if you don't care about the
anti-static ability, then just use a piece on outdoor carpet or a heavy
piece of linoleum. Once the BA is one the mat on my bench, it's also a lot
easier to rotate too.

At work where I often encounter modern BA's (so what if a three-foot rack is
full of solid-state and microwave plumbing, it's still BA heavy!), we use
cheap Harbor Freight hydraulic engine hoists and a few scissors-jack wheeled
platforms. Pick up the rack off of a shipping pallet, drop it onto a
scissors-jack cart, pump it to a convenient working height, spin it around
so you can sit in one place and work on it, and, if it needs to go to a
specific bench work station, roll it there and transfer it with the engine
hoist. (I suppose I should point out that modern military rack design calls
for integrated lift points for hooks and cables.)

With a similar inspiration, you can work with the biggest BA's in your
garage. (Appliance dolly wheels are good if the rack is moderately tall,
maybe too tall to put on a cart.) And if you are seriously into BA's, then
your shack has roll-in access, right? And you also should own a pickup
truck, or at minimum, have your car equipped with a decent hitch so you can
rent one of those open "garden" trailers so you can fetch the real prize
BA's.

Another Ed:
--
Ed
WB6WSN
El Cajon, CA USA



Chris Suslowicz July 4th 05 08:49 PM

In article ,
"Ed" none@this-time wrote:

I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more. How do you move them around the shack from
work bench to work station for repair and operation, by yourself?


One of the things I regret not rescueing from the dumpster at work was
a "Genie" trolley that was used when removing/replacing heavy parts in
the mainframe computer. Think of a porter's trolley/sacktruck fitted
with long stabilising feet (low enough to go *under* a 19" rack) with
ball casters on the ends, and a moveable platform that can be raised
and lowered by a handcranked winch. Add to that various gripping and
clamping fixtures that could be bolted to the platform to hold stuff
and a maximum loading of about 300 pounds. The winch cable had come
off at one end and they scrapped it. 8-(

The only drawback is that it needs a solid (and flat) floor to work on,
which is not nice for *you* to work on.

If I ever see another, I shall grab it!

Chris. (Next project: 96 pounds of Reception Set R107 - some knobs
missing and a certain amount of rust, but it looks otherwise OK.)



Uncle Peter July 5th 05 02:15 AM


"Ed" none@this-time wrote in message
...
I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more. How do you move them around the shack from
work bench to work station for repair and operation, by yourself?
Thanks,
Ed



I have the same problems with 100 lbs. receivers, going in and out
of a six foot rack!! The AR-88D is a 98 lb. beast!



Bob Rinaldi July 5th 05 02:17 AM

I sold them all....


" Uncle Peter" wrote in message
news:9blye.44421$go.15114@fed1read05...

"Ed" none@this-time wrote in message
...
I have just realized that I am as old as my radios. I can't pick up 100
pound transmitters any more. How do you move them around the shack from
work bench to work station for repair and operation, by yourself?
Thanks,
Ed



I have the same problems with 100 lbs. receivers, going in and out
of a six foot rack!! The AR-88D is a 98 lb. beast!






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