Forgive me if I made things worse but seriously here is what I might try...
First off the mod deck and power supply decks will have the most weight... I would pull them out (it is rack mounted I hope...) first and move them as separate units... that will reduce the weight problem quite a bit... As for the rack enclosure... I don't remember how wide you said it was but use some very strong ply wood to form a bridge from ground level or truck level to your house opening... before putting the enclosure on its side have ready some strips of old carpeting lay it down on the plywood with the fuzzy side down and the rubber backing up so it will go against the enclosure... this will help with pushing the thing around... less friction... When you get the enclosure into your house remember that this enclosure must have rear doors as well as front doors so don't plan on pushing it up against a wall... you will need the space of the width of the rear doors plus a little extra so you can get into the back of it to work on it if needed... and if you push it flush against the wall you will need to get into those doors... been there done that... Make absolutely sure your floor stringers can handle the extra weight... if not you will need to build up some extra support before the rig 'settles in' so to speak... I'm sure I have forgot something but if you have questions you may do it on list or direct... I have moved a few 'really big rigs' in years past... 73 vince ka1iic On Friday 01 December 2006 22:40, John Lawson wrote: > On Fri, 1 Dec 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > duh ....... consider using a window. Sometimes the window opening > > is wider than the door opening. klc ______________________________________________________________ AMRadio mailing list List Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/amradio Partner Website: http://www.amfone.net Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.html Post: mailto:[email protected]

