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  • Moving Millermatic 252

    Millermatic 252 is a near perfect machine. Its greatest shortcoming is its lack of a lifting eye. Loading it in a truck is a PITA, now a cellar post project leads me to want it in the cellar. I have a hatchway to let it down with backhoe, but lack a lifting eye. Have you figured a good option?
    Dynasty 280DX
    Bobcat 250
    MM252
    Spool gun
    Twentieth Century 295
    Twentieth Century 295 AC
    Marquette spot welder
    Smith torches

  • #2
    Originally posted by WillieB View Post
    Millermatic 252 is a near perfect machine. Its greatest shortcoming is its lack of a lifting eye. Loading it in a truck is a PITA, now a cellar post project leads me to want it in the cellar. I have a hatchway to let it down with backhoe, but lack a lifting eye. Have you figured a good option?
    Can you get close enough with a 30A...?? and leave the 252 outside..??
    .

    *******************************************
    The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

    “The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten”

    Buy the best tools you can afford.. Learn to use them to the best of your ability.. and take care of them...

    My Blue Stuff:
    Dynasty 350DX Tigrunner
    Dynasty 200DX
    Millermatic 350P w/25ft Alumapro & 30A
    Millermatic 200

    TONS of Non-Blue Equip, plus CNC Mill, Lathes & a Plasmacam w/ PowerMax-1000

    Comment


    • #3
      Well, you have a welder, perhaps merely make a lifting cage

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by cruizer View Post
        Well, you have a welder, perhaps merely make a lifting cage
        I've been studying on the subject. I used to use plastic 55 gallon cider barrels, I had a cage for them. I wondered about a two point at rear where the upper tank supports are, but couldn't find a strong enough mounting point in front except below the center of gravity.
        Dynasty 280DX
        Bobcat 250
        MM252
        Spool gun
        Twentieth Century 295
        Twentieth Century 295 AC
        Marquette spot welder
        Smith torches

        Comment


        • #5
          The bottle is pretty much the heaviest item, however if you were to move its position to the side, you'd be much better off, building your cage. That or strengthening the existing bottle holder and moving the centre closer to the rear for lifting

          Comment


          • #6
            Moving Millermatic 252

            Or just let bottle outside & run hose down as would do with suitcase.

            Comment


            • #7
              I move 300CF bottles in and out all the time. I have a cap with a short piece of chain welded to it. It would be a welder without tank.

              I once had a major mishap with a cider barrel. So I built a 4 caster dolly of three layers of 3/4" plywood. I bored four 1-1/2" holes in it, made two large U shaped arches of 1" galvanized water pipes, and welded them together at the intersection. The barrel was secure in its cage, and couldn't tip over like in a sling. Maybe I'll build a variation on this theme.
              Dynasty 280DX
              Bobcat 250
              MM252
              Spool gun
              Twentieth Century 295
              Twentieth Century 295 AC
              Marquette spot welder
              Smith torches

              Comment


              • #8
                How about a ramp? Machine is a little over 200 lbs. and bring the bottle in separately. Park your truck close by and use a rope for control during descent.---Meltedmetal
                ---Meltedmetal

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Meltedmetal View Post
                  How about a ramp? Machine is a little over 200 lbs. and bring the bottle in separately. Park your truck close by and use a rope for control during descent.---Meltedmetal
                  I have moved boilers down stairways that way. In this case I have two Bilco style doors one has no stairway. The original purpose was a wood furnace we don't use. The other hatchway has obstacles preventing its use. I'll build a cage.
                  Dynasty 280DX
                  Bobcat 250
                  MM252
                  Spool gun
                  Twentieth Century 295
                  Twentieth Century 295 AC
                  Marquette spot welder
                  Smith torches

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by WillieB View Post
                    I have moved boilers down stairways that way. In this case I have two Bilco style doors one has no stairway. The original purpose was a wood furnace we don't use. The other hatchway has obstacles preventing its use. I'll build a cage.
                    or you could find a decent used MM200 for on site work.. and save your MM252 from the wear and tear... bumps dents.... still see them in the $600 range and they DO have a lifting eye... just a thought..
                    .

                    *******************************************
                    The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

                    “The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten”

                    Buy the best tools you can afford.. Learn to use them to the best of your ability.. and take care of them...

                    My Blue Stuff:
                    Dynasty 350DX Tigrunner
                    Dynasty 200DX
                    Millermatic 350P w/25ft Alumapro & 30A
                    Millermatic 200

                    TONS of Non-Blue Equip, plus CNC Mill, Lathes & a Plasmacam w/ PowerMax-1000

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by H80N View Post
                      or you could find a decent used MM200 for on site work.. and save your MM252 from the wear and tear... bumps dents.... still see them in the $600 range and they DO have a lifting eye... just a thought..
                      Have you any idea how much mileage Mrs. B would get out of that. Of course, she hasn't been in the cellar in a year or more. It'd be a while before she found out.

                      Years ago I bought a Jeep I only wanted for its fresh rebuilt engine. It was a back burner project, it sat out in the WAY back a year or more. Upon discovering it she gave me a lot of flack. In her mind this was the ultimate example of male hoarding! She told the story many times to any of her sympathetic friends who would listen. Without mentioning it, I removed the engine, and gave it to a friend who wanted to hook his WWII cannon to it. For more than a year she continued to gripe about this "piece of junk" I said nothing. Eventually she discovered it was gone. I pointed out to her that it couldn't have bothered her much if it took a year to notice it was gone!

                      Besides, how's she gonna notice one more blue welder around here?
                      Dynasty 280DX
                      Bobcat 250
                      MM252
                      Spool gun
                      Twentieth Century 295
                      Twentieth Century 295 AC
                      Marquette spot welder
                      Smith torches

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Traditional VT stockpiling....

                        Haul it out of sight up the logging road uphill into the sugarbush with all the other old iron and other stuff you might need someday....

                        as a young man in the 1970's.... I found some real treasures in some of those stashes....

                        it is a tradition that I am sorry to see fading away... some truly wonderful things were preserved that way.... these days that stuff is considered an eyesore or environmental blight...
                        the greenies have over-regulated that beautiful state into ... a quagmire where locals cannot afford to live...
                        Last edited by H80N; 02-21-2015, 08:04 AM.
                        .

                        *******************************************
                        The more you know, The better you know, How little you know

                        “The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten”

                        Buy the best tools you can afford.. Learn to use them to the best of your ability.. and take care of them...

                        My Blue Stuff:
                        Dynasty 350DX Tigrunner
                        Dynasty 200DX
                        Millermatic 350P w/25ft Alumapro & 30A
                        Millermatic 200

                        TONS of Non-Blue Equip, plus CNC Mill, Lathes & a Plasmacam w/ PowerMax-1000

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by WillieB View Post
                          Have you any idea how much mileage Mrs. B would get out of that. Of course, she hasn't been in the cellar in a year or more. It'd be a while before she found out.

                          Years ago I bought a Jeep I only wanted for its fresh rebuilt engine. It was a back burner project, it sat out in the WAY back a year or more. Upon discovering it she gave me a lot of flack. In her mind this was the ultimate example of male hoarding! She told the story many times to any of her sympathetic friends who would listen. Without mentioning it, I removed the engine, and gave it to a friend who wanted to hook his WWII cannon to it. For more than a year she continued to gripe about this "piece of junk" I said nothing. Eventually she discovered it was gone. I pointed out to her that it couldn't have bothered her much if it took a year to notice it was gone!

                          Besides, how's she gonna notice one more blue welder around here?
                          I'd have told my wife that she must have dreamt it and that I never had such a thing. She wouldn't buy that story but I'd use it just the same.---Meltedmetal
                          ---Meltedmetal

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Just use a couple of nylon slings. Rig tank separate and then machine. OR as mentioned make a lifting setup for it.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              It has been lifted. It was easier than I expected. pass the two ends of a 10 foot rope through the holes in the upper tank support, tie them through the two holes in the lower tank support. Do the same thing with double half hitches through the front handles/lead hangers, passing down to the front casters. Strain is at bottom, gravity thinks it's at top. Toss a chain over a loader bucket, hook the middle of each rope. A little fussing with length, cause the floor is a good ten feet from the sidewalls of the hatchway, It's all good! I know it's blasphemy, I'm just being candid; Miller should have had a lifting eye, better still two.
                              Dynasty 280DX
                              Bobcat 250
                              MM252
                              Spool gun
                              Twentieth Century 295
                              Twentieth Century 295 AC
                              Marquette spot welder
                              Smith torches

                              Comment

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