Re: flying pizza oven?
My thought was that the buyer will want the oven, and for the higher price they pay for the house you can build a new one.
You can fix the things you did not like the first time. I think everything I do comes out better the second time.
James
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Re: flying pizza oven?
Keep in mind the turning radius is very small though..
Anyway, good luck with the sale thats most important right now.
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Re: flying pizza oven?
UF - I followed the link - I'm worried about the size (six feet wide, almost nine feet long) but it might be possible. Then I would have some fence to remove, but I might get away with not disassembling the oven as much to reduce weight (a necessity if I use a crane). I learned a few days ago that someone I've known casually for some time works for a local crane company and could "bring the crane home" after hours and do the work for me at a discounted rate - still need to be damn sure of my weight estimates before getting a crane out there. If I can make the path clear for a rough terrain forklift I'd have less work to do to get a working oven at the new house. Still, I've been looking forward to seeing it fly...
Actually, we have had some increased interest in our house this past week and are hoping we find a buyer, then my plans for the oven will become clear. Once someone makes an offer on the house we'll determine whether to move the oven or sell it and start over.
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Re: flying pizza oven?
Originally posted by maver View PostJim, I'm interested in your idea, but am having a hard time picturing it - I understand to prepare for the crane I'll need to jack my hearth off the block stand (plan to support on 3 4x6 8' beams). You are suggesting moving the hearth/oven off to steel plates after jacking it up? Then pull the (estimated) 5000 pound oven up to the front to be loaded by a forklift? I have maybe 12 feet between my house and the neighbors on an approximately 15% grade. There is a fence as well, but that can be moved. He has an air conditioning unit that pinches us to 8 feet at one point. The other side of my house is worse. I think the crane is reasonable, and the cost is acceptable given what I need to pay to replace the oven if I cannot move it. I think my bigger problem is what to do with the old block stand and pad to prevent that being an anchor on the sales price of my soon to be old house. I can look into the cost of renting a small jack hammer. It might be easier to convert the stand into something useful.
we rent these on large jobs and they would easily lift and move the oven and at 5 miles down the road with the soft tires you could almost drive it there..with an escort of-course. at $250-300 for the day that quite a savings..
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Re: flying pizza oven?
I reckon with your masonry skill, you could knock up a quick barbie on the old slab in no time. Who doesn't want a barbeque in their backyard? It'll add value rather than detracting from the sale price.. Perhaps a couple of photos of your site will help the forum come up with suggestions..
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Re: flying pizza oven?
Jim, I'm interested in your idea, but am having a hard time picturing it - I understand to prepare for the crane I'll need to jack my hearth off the block stand (plan to support on 3 4x6 8' beams). You are suggesting moving the hearth/oven off to steel plates after jacking it up? Then pull the (estimated) 5000 pound oven up to the front to be loaded by a forklift? I have maybe 12 feet between my house and the neighbors on an approximately 15% grade. There is a fence as well, but that can be moved. He has an air conditioning unit that pinches us to 8 feet at one point. The other side of my house is worse. I think the crane is reasonable, and the cost is acceptable given what I need to pay to replace the oven if I cannot move it. I think my bigger problem is what to do with the old block stand and pad to prevent that being an anchor on the sales price of my soon to be old house. I can look into the cost of renting a small jack hammer. It might be easier to convert the stand into something useful.
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Re: flying pizza oven?
Maver,
This might or might not work. If you took the oven off the foundation and placed it on a purpose designed floor between the houses (steel plates used in road construction?) could you not use a winch to pull it to the front of the house and then pick it up. Just a thought. This is a tough problem.
Jim
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Re: flying pizza oven?
Nick, I don't think you appreciate how close my house is to my neighbors. To prepare my site for the oven and my patio I rented a bobcat (actually won at an fundraising auction or else would have done it by hand) which barely fit between my house and my neighbors. There's no gradall or forklift that can fit between our houses that could also support the oven. The oven will barely fit between the houses, hence the crane idea. At least a crane should not have any sudden movements, unlike the risk of a slip with rollers trying to pull the oven up the grade.
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Re: flying pizza oven?
Hows about a Gradall? If the Gradall was delivered on a big enough flatbed, you could load the oven onto the front of it, reload the gradall, then unload it five miles down the track..
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Re: flying pizza oven?
I Appreciate everyone's ideas.
DMUM, jahysea and James, we have a moderate grade from our front to our back yard, but more significantly I live in suburbia where the houses are fairly close together - rollers or a forklift are fairly certainly not feasible. I did get a quote for just the crane at $1300 - should be able to do both moves as we are moving to a house about 5miles away and the $1300 should include enough hours for both. I'd have to add to it the cost of a flatbed, but that's manageable. Paulages, I also constructed mine with the ability to be lifted off the blockstand - 4 rebar pegs with PVC sleeves project from the stand up into the hearth - should lift right off.
The bigger obstacle has become my wife's insistence that the pad and blockstand cannot be made into an attractive item when we sell our current house. I considered converting the area to a pit barbecue (in back) with the front half turning into counter/staging space. I'd definitely need to create a new pad/blockstand - the weight of the pad is just too much for the crane - a larger crane would require permits/street closure
Still working at it.
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Re: flying pizza oven?
i intentionally built mine with the hearth relatively unattached to the stand, so that it could be forklifted if i ever need to move it. personally, i look forward to the excuse to build another one...
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Re: flying pizza oven?
That's a very good thought. We had to move a propane tank out of a vineyard that had no access, and we just rolled it down the row with log rollers. Less stress on the hearth.
James
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Re: flying pizza oven?
I would tend to agree with James, forklift and flatbed truck rental sounds affordable, crane does not.
Marc, for the stand at the new house, what about quickly mocking something up to support the oven and hearth and building the real foundation around it? Dig trenches, fill with gravel, and quickly build a square foundation with dry stacked cinder blocks that will go inside the real foundation.
Then at leisure, build real "u" shaped foundation outside the dry stacked blocks. Use floor jack to lift each side of oven 1/4 inch or so above dry stacked blocks when placing final course of finished blocks to allow transfering weight and disassembly of inner stand.
What to do with old stand? Put some sort of cap over top of cinder blocks (redwood?), and place trash cans inside new garbage can storage space. Or fill with firewood and call firewood storage. Install peaked roof onto the nicest dog house or child play house in town.
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Re: flying pizza oven?
I wouldn`t mess with the crane unless you had to lift it up over something. Use log rollers to get it to the end of the driveway, then pull it up on the flatbed with the winch.
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Re: flying pizza oven?
Redbrick - I definitely planned to shoot video and snap pictures of the move, but if a professional wants to fly up and document the event, how could I complain?
James - I considered moving the hearth only, but I still have to sell my current house - not sure what to do with the pad and the blockstand to make it attractive to prospective buyers, suggestions? Besides, until I finalize my purchase of the new house (pending resolution of the small amount of LP siding hidden under the deck) I cannot really access the backyard to prepare a site for the new oven, so if it's possible to move the pad it would help speed setup and avoid having to pay to store the oven and move it multiple times (off a flatbed, into storage, back onto a flatbed for delivery, risking damage each move). Jim, if the pad is not poured in place will I have too unstable a substrate? I considered preparing a site with level compacted gravel, then pouring a "leveling layer" of fresh concrete to account for uneven bottom surface of the slab, applying fresh plastic vapor barrier, then dropping the slab/blockstand in place. I'm completely making this up, so I value any input from those with more construction/engineering background.
So if I fire the oven, then apply the door, will that make the oven lighter - sort of a hot air balloon
Wonder how many pizzas I could make between liftoff from my backyard and touchdown on the flatbed? I never used to have vertigo with heights as a child, but that could definitely slow me down now.
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