Sawdust=manglitter
Established Member
With a house move looming in a month or two (it fell through last minute few weeks ago, but re-sold within a few days thankfully!) i had already started packing away a bunch of tools and getting things prepped. So i just managed to put my table saw up on a dolly using a rolling car jack and a bunch of scrap studs of various lengths…
So it’s got me wondering about the physical transportation. I’ve got a few rolling tool cabinets full of tools, as well as now the table saw on a dolly, will put the metal lathe on it’s own dollies, the bandsaw has a wheel kit, my clamp rack is on HD castors etc etc… so my original plan was to hire a luton type van with a tail lift to move my workshop contents, but how the heck do i make sure that anything on wheels doesnt move around or tip over during transport?? There’s only so much ratchet strapping to the van walls you can do. How have other people got around the wheel slipping issue?? In my head atleast, chocks will only work effectively with non-swivelling castors, whereas most things only have a pair of non-swivelling and also a pair of swivelling castors.
Any tips or suggestions (ideally from personal experience) would be greatly appreciated
So it’s got me wondering about the physical transportation. I’ve got a few rolling tool cabinets full of tools, as well as now the table saw on a dolly, will put the metal lathe on it’s own dollies, the bandsaw has a wheel kit, my clamp rack is on HD castors etc etc… so my original plan was to hire a luton type van with a tail lift to move my workshop contents, but how the heck do i make sure that anything on wheels doesnt move around or tip over during transport?? There’s only so much ratchet strapping to the van walls you can do. How have other people got around the wheel slipping issue?? In my head atleast, chocks will only work effectively with non-swivelling castors, whereas most things only have a pair of non-swivelling and also a pair of swivelling castors.
Any tips or suggestions (ideally from personal experience) would be greatly appreciated