dexteria":2n9xkpc6 said:
My local joiner has just retired after 40 odd years. I have aquired one of these 32" ers, a 40" radial arm saw, a 20" planer thicknesser, a combined chain/chissel morticer and a 12" combi saw planer. All Wadkin. Managed to get them all for £900 which was good but I have still to get them out. The planer/thicknesser alone weights in at approx 2000kg. I have access to a forklift and a tractor with a flatbed trailer. If anyone has any advice on how best to move these beasties around I will greatfully take it on board.
The P/T is probably a bit over 1500kg based on the 24in RM being 1750kg..... Still ruddy heavy, though not as bad as a 32in rip saw. As a point of comparison the Wadkin UX I currently use on my avatar weights in at a not insubstantial 1350kg but can be moved round the workshop with a prybar and judicious use of wooden blocks as fulcums......
The machine you'll really have the problems with is probably the MF (chain/chisel morticer) - they're tall and top heavy so you'll need to block it up onto a sturdy pallet then strap it down before moving it. Watch how you lift it - the chain grinders are
really vulnerable (as they hand off the RH side as you look from the front) and you might be as well to unbolt it before shifting the machine
Above: Wadkin RM 24 x 9in planer/thicknesser (late model)
Below: Wadkin MF chain and chisel morticer - about 7ft high!
Failing having machine moving skates/turntable and a toe jack (HSS Lift and Shift?), if you can get a couple of pallet trucks, a wide 2 tonne, a narrow 1 tonne, some pallets, plywood blocks, 3 or 4 pry bars and a scaffolding bar cut down into 5 or 6 lengths of roller then you'll be part way there. A wagon with a 20 tonne HIAB helps, as well. Just make sure that you have properly rated webbing straps and don't pick anything up by the tables, especially the over and under. The motors hang out of the sides on a lot of the older equipment which makes it much more of a pain to move. Good luck!
I've recently bought a few rebuild jobs for the winter including:
A little Bursgreen MZ 16in chairmaker's bandsaw (pre-1957, so technically a Sagar) which will replace the Startrite I have for smaller work. This is a heavy little so-and-so, all cast-iron and an astounding 550kg! But it has a nifty little trick all of its's own:
Does that count as a gloat? :lol:
Scrit