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Thread: Moving heavy 15" planer to the basement

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
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    Moving heavy 15" planer to the basement

    I'm hoping in the Grizzly sale coming up to have a 15" planer G0453Z shipped my way. I have a basement shop and this may be the heaviest tool of all.

    Have any folks had experience getting it down a flight of stairs? Can you take it appart in any meaningful way to break down the weight and mobility? What's the best way and how many guys does it take?

    Experience with that? Thoughts? Thanks, Justin

  2. #2
    I have moved my 20" jet planer up and down the stairs. I can tell you that @ 700 lbs, there is no way I would attempt it myself. Hire a safe mover, they are used to moving heavy things and have the equipment to do it. It cost me $100 each time I moved it....

  3. #3
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    My Grizzly band saw was just about 300#.

    I wound up laying ITS boxes on top of some double-wall corrugated boxes that were knocked flat.

    Then, I stayed on the downhill side of the "sled," and controlled its descent.

    Worked fine.

    When I just brought my Performax drum sander home, I picked up a Harbor Freight hand truck and some ratcheting tie-down straps. THAT went well, too.

    You may want to consider a block and tackle (mine was another HF special), for raising the base and mounting the bed -- particularly if you have an open ceiling, and can anchor the hoist to the joists.

    Good luck !

  4. #4
    I moved a 20" planer to the basement, sparated the main section from the base which takes 100 pounds or so off and gets the center of gravity lower. Strapped the planer to an appliance dolly, use hefty rope and tie it tight. Needed help to tip it up on the wheels, I rolled it around the house to the top of the stairs then two friends in front and me on the cart and we gently let it down each step, 11 or 12 steps total. Once all the parts were inside a 2 ton comealong chained to the main steel beam holding up the first floor winched that planer up high enough to slide the base / motor assembly back under and bolt it up. I can handle up to 250 or so myself on the dolly, above that I need assistance. Mainly the assistance is to resist gravity and make sure the load doesn't get out of control...

  5. #5
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    Justin, if you have not already done so, take a peak at OWWM.org and search for "moving into basement." There you will find lots of tips and tricks to move that machine safely.

    Good luck with your downhill move,

    Tom, in Douglasville, thinking being on the downhill side of 700 pounds doesn't sound like a good idea.
    Chapel Hills Turning Studio
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    Hoosier by birth, Georgian by choice!

    Have blanks, will trade.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tom Hamilton View Post
    Tom, in Douglasville, thinking being on the downhill side of 700 pounds doesn't sound like a good idea.
    Agreed.

    But do we know how many packages it arrives in, and the weight of each of those packages ?

  7. #7
    I sold a 15" Grizzly that weighed 490lbs. The guy that bought it had a jacked-up pickup whose tailgate was about 4' above the ground So we had to disassemble it quite a bit.

    At least on the one I sold, the motor easily came off, then the piece that held the cutterhead was secured to the posts with some allen screws - once loosened, we just cranked the bed up, forcing the cutterhead piece up, and removed that. Each piece was easily lifted, then.

  8. #8
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    I moved 15" planer in and out of my basement with furniture dolly and 4 guys worked good. not want to ever do again though.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by eugene thomas View Post
    I moved 15" planer in and out of my basement with furniture dolly and 4 guys worked good. not want to ever do again though.
    I think this pretty much nails it.

    Yes, it can be done. But what ever you do, don't take it lightly. Four guys sounds about right. 500 pounds careening out of control down the stairs could easily kill a guy.

    But 4 smart, strong guys could also control the beast.

    Give the job all the respect it deserves and then some.

  10. #10
    Get those ForeArm Forklift lifting straps they sell at U-haul and similar.

    http://www.uhaul.com/MovingSupplies/...Straps?id=2744

    They are without a doubt the best $20 I have ever spent. I would pay 10x that price if that is what they cost. The straps allow you to pick the machine from any orientation. So when going down the stairs, you keep the machine perfectly vertical. The guy on the bottom has ~2' of strap, the guy on top has 4'. When you lift, nobody is bending over, the machine is vertical and you're hands are holding on to balance the machine, not to lift. Also you don't have to worry as much about thin edges that dig into your hands and what not. As long as the edge isn't sharp, the straps are fine.

    Doesn't help a whole lot if you and your buddy can't lift it yourselves though. It will probably take 4 of you to lift and move it, but only room for 2, at least with my basement steps. My brother and I have moved all of my machines into the basement with these straps, but took the top off my G0490, jointer was seperate from stand & motor, took the motor out of the planer. I originally got them to move a 4'tx3'dx5'w carboard box that weight 350 lbs and had no lift points, just a smooth cardboard box out of one house and into another (new furniture delivered 2 days before move). Loading the truck, me and a friend moved it. Into my house, I was on one end, my skinny brother and step dad on the other. I didn't see any other way to be able to move it and leave it in the box. Like I said, best $20 I ever spent and I probably would pay $200 for another pair if that's what they cost when mine need replaced.

    A 15" planer always worried me, as much as I want one, I decided to get a Belsaw for now, but still took the 5hp motor out of it. 70lbs is 70lbs, big difference between 200 and 270. My other idea was to build a sleigh with long runners, as wide as you can make it and still fit easily through any doors. Hook a cable or chain up to my truck and use that to slowly slide it down the stairs, assuming you have an outside access door, not trying to take it down the interior steps, that would not be fun

  11. #11
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    Just trying to lessen your concern but, not really much help on the stair issue . . . I was concerned about getting the beast off the pallet let alone down some stairs. Turned out I was over-concerned. I had three guys show up to help. Me (at about 175lbs) and another guy used the lifting bars and walked it right off the pallet easily. It is definitly enough weight to give you trouble if it gets ahead of you but, it was not as difficult as I had feared.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

  12. #12
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    Some great thoughts all. That 700lbs and not more than two or three guys fitting in the stairs...it's a daunting thought. The Uhaul forklift straps look like they could help a great deal. I watched the video on them and I think for that price it's worth a try.

    Looks like taking the motor out and the extension wings off will help some. I might consider taking the top off, but with the motor out, the base can't weigh all that much.

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Justin Dreier View Post
    That 700lbs and not more than two or three guys fitting in the stairs...it's a daunting thought.
    True. But, speaking from experience its 675 shipped. 40 pounds or more is carton. The cast infeed and outfeed are probably 30lbs or so each. Pull the switch post, handwheel, motor, belt and cabinet covers, etc. and you will have a manageable beast.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

  14. #14
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    That could be a manageable. Take everything off that can come off, take it slow and one step at a time. I think we can get it down there.

    Thanks for the experiences guys.

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Justin Dreier View Post
    I'm hoping in the Grizzly sale coming up to have a 15" planer G0453Z shipped my way.
    What sale and when? I'm looking for the same machine.
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