Hey there Old-Lumens. Thrilled you have all these new tools and machinery. Having been in the CNC machinery industry going on 25 years, I have accumulated a number of items that I think you may have a need for or may be helpful to have. Iâd like to put a little care package together for you. I love your work and understand having the proper tool makes life easier especially the custom work. A gift from me to you if you will PM me your address to where I can send the package to. Love my custom Mag you did for me, friends are envious.
The cherry picker, Sam. Technically itâs an engine hoist, used for lifting the engine out of a car to replace it or rebuild it.
Justin didnât film that part because he was afraid he would lose the lathe and didnât want that memorialized if it killed it.
He put straps around the lathe, hooked the straps to the bar on the hoist, then jacked it up with a hydraulic jack at the rear. The long bar lifted the lathe then Justin slid the bench he made underneath it. After lowering the lathe onto the bench, he removed the straps and the hoist. After bolting down the lathe to the bench, he used a pallet jack to drive the entire assembly into position. Again itâs a hydraulic jack operating a simple âfork liftâ that you man power into position. The pallet jack is designed to lift a pallet off the ground high enough to then roll it around and move it. Usually used in warehouses and tractor trailers to maneuver pallets a short distance by hand.
These guys are right, itâs all in the video.
The video is a series of stills, spliced together as sort of a slideshow. Thatâs why I remembered them as pictures.
I hope OL doesnât mind, here is a few captures from the video showing how it was done,