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Projects Moving tips! Need solid suggestions! SUCCESS!! OR NOT!!

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by hotrodA, Jun 20, 2025.

  1. Ugh, I'll be moving soon once I close on the property, which should be in the next few weeks. I keep procrastinating the packing and boxing of the little things around the house and garage. I estimate I'll have 5 trips with my 18' open deck car trailer full of vehicles/parts/tools/equipment, and 1 trip with my friends 20' enclosed car trailer for the furniture.

    I was hoping to be able to buy some land and build a big shop and it be my final and forever home, but with the current market it's just not possible for me. However, I did find a nice mid century ranch with a wrap around driveway and a garage out back in a nice neighborhood so it should work out for a bit.
     
    swade41, alanp561, hotrodA and 2 others like this.
  2. hotrodA
    Joined: Sep 12, 2002
    Posts: 7,458

    hotrodA
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Down to the last three days, movers are here to start packing and start loading.
    I didn’t think that leaving this place would have such an emotional impact.:(
    I love the mountains, and the small town we live in.
    Lots of great memories from sixteen years here as well as an emptiness from dreams not finished, nor even started.
    My wife, and the daughters and granddaughters, finally got me to realize that we weren’t getting any younger, but the clincher was the great granddaughter due in December will be named after my wife. That made it five to one, and I knuckled under.:D
    See you in middle Tennessee soon!:cool:
     
    Last edited: Oct 13, 2025
    X-cpe, swade41, alanp561 and 7 others like this.
  3. hotrodA
    Joined: Sep 12, 2002
    Posts: 7,458

    hotrodA
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Well it’s official.
    We are at the new residence in Murfreesboro, TN.
    The movers are unloading now.
    As far as leaving East TN, “Parting is such sweet sorrow”. This area will never replace the East TN
    mountains.:( It’s really going to take some gettin’ used to. SIGH!
     
  4. Weedburner 40
    Joined: Jan 26, 2006
    Posts: 1,152

    Weedburner 40
    Member

    Welcome to Middle Tennessee, we are in the flatlands of West TN. After you get settled and you get a wild hair, contact me and come for a visit, its only about two and an half hours from us.
     
    Bill's Auto Works likes this.
  5. Ziggster
    Joined: Aug 27, 2018
    Posts: 3,245

    Ziggster
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I’ve been getting rid of “stuff” the last five years since my wife p***ed in 2020. Just after she p***ed I decided to take on another project. Ended up selling it two years later. The buyer made 4 trips (8 hrs each) to haul away everything. He had a pickup with trailer and and E350 van with a trailer. I learned then, only one project at a time. I plan on downsizing/moving within the next five years, and the plan is to take very little with me. When it’s time to move, that’s when you find out who your real friends are. lol!
     
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  6. alanp561
    Joined: Oct 1, 2017
    Posts: 5,635

    alanp561
    Member

    Just read this and I believe the THP was checking out the width of your lift. Max width limit without a permit is 102". Over 102" you need a permit, wide load signs and flags at the widest points. I bet if you check the total width of the lift at the outsides of the base pads, you'll find you are over. Not to worry now that you've got it home, but just a word of warning for anyone else considering a move like that.
     
    klleetrucking likes this.
  7. Congrats!

    I'm about 50% packed up, myself. On Monday I'll start the back and forth of loading and emptying my 2 trailers over the next few weeks. Doing it all by myself, as usual. My new house is 200 miles away, so it's gonna be a challenge with a M-F work schedule.
     
    RodStRace likes this.
  8. Jeff Norwell
    Joined: Aug 20, 2003
    Posts: 15,332

    Jeff Norwell
    MODERATOR
    Staff Member

    Congrats on the move..... we downsized..... It was an emotional and physical nightmare at my age...A year now and still unpacking.
    Bought a clean double door Sea can.. keep the stuff for the time being in there(offsite)
     
    RodStRace and Silva like this.
  9. Silva
    Joined: Apr 28, 2005
    Posts: 546

    Silva
    Member

    Jeff, that is a spot on ***essment! Its been, just 4 yrs since I retired and moved from Texas. I liquidated a lot of stuff before moving and it was still "an emotional and physical nightmare"...
     
    RodStRace and Jeff Norwell like this.
  10. RodStRace
    Joined: Dec 7, 2007
    Posts: 9,390

    RodStRace
    Member

    I would add that you need to check the area for zoning and a big one, electrical service.
    If you are hoping/planning on 220V stuff and the infrastructure isn't there, a big building is not the big cost.
     
  11. 31Apickup
    Joined: Nov 8, 2005
    Posts: 3,657

    31Apickup
    Member

    Recently finished moving 7.5 miles. I’d haul a pickup load every time I’d go over to the new house, lost track of how many loads. Had a towing company move my coupe an a tilt back, which was quicker than renting a trailer, loading and unloading. Final big stuff I moved in a U-Haul. Now I can start getting the shop set up and organized. Plan to get a lift eventually. IMG_4285.jpeg
     
  12. hotrodA
    Joined: Sep 12, 2002
    Posts: 7,458

    hotrodA
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Well, we’re now officially residents. Movers finished up today.
    Here’s a good example of 10 pounds in a 5 pound box. Wife said it couldn’t be done. HA! Take that! Right to the door, but it’s in. Of course no room to swing a cat, much less do any work. Time to line up a metal building guy for the addition.

    IMG_4597.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Nov 29, 2025
    SPEC likes this.
  13. pvfjr
    Joined: Apr 28, 2020
    Posts: 239

    pvfjr
    Member

    Get a ton of 4-drawer or 5-drawer file cabinets for free or cheap off marketplace. There are often many available in cities. Load all the heavy miscellaneous stuff into them, then wrap with the stretch plastic. It goes easily onto a hand truck from the side, and is equivalent to having several stacked boxes that would likely collapse, tip over, or tear open by comparison. Plus when you get there, there's nothing to unpack. Just line them up against a wall wherever you want them and cut the plastic off.

    I use "chalk writer" pens from the dollar store to label the drawers. Wipes off easy with windex when you want to reorganize.
     
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  14. willys36
    Joined: May 6, 2006
    Posts: 3,251

    willys36
    Member

    I moved from my 1600sqft shop in California to North Texas. My main advice is PURGE!!!!! Get rid of all the 'stuff
    you know you will likely never use. I left my 2-post lift, 5hp air compressor, for the new owner. Gave my steel and wood stashes to friends. Those can be replaced cheaper than moved in the final ****ysis. Then bite the bullet and pack everything possible into moving boxes and label them. I'd rather take a beating with a claw hammer than move again!!
     
    Beanscoot likes this.
  15. hotrodA
    Joined: Sep 12, 2002
    Posts: 7,458

    hotrodA
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Well, the s**t is never ending with this move. I desperately needed to start on the shop addition ASAP, but oh noooo.
    Got the metal building company out to do the slab layout and they say that I’m within 10 feet of the end of the septic field lines and they can’t proceed. WTF.??
    Not ON/OVER the field line, just not 10 feet from the CAPPED ENDS of the lines.

    Went to County Planning and was told, “Sorry, you have to apply for a Sewer Field Modification Permit”. That is controlled by the State: The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, or TDEC.
    Called a couple of field contractors and they won’t touch it without the SFMP.
    The application is $400 plus $100 for the inspection, non-refundable! Just to get the approval to shorten the lines to meet the 10 foot setback, PLUS the actual work! Oh yeah, just the approval (or denial) could take up to 45 days. By then it will be winter.

    Another “privilege” of living in a strictly regulated, bureaucratic urban area.
    Back where we moved from, my neighbor with his Kubota and I would have those lines shortened in a day, and the slab would be finished by now!

    And yes, I checked before moving on the field location and was told I was in the clear, by the same planning department. Catch 22.

    Meanwhile the existing building is full to the door and my cars are still in storage.
    Sorry for the rant, I’m pissed, discouraged, aggravated, and should have stayed in the mountains.
    Back to your regular programming.
     
    Last edited: Nov 29, 2025
  16. Beanscoot
    Joined: May 14, 2008
    Posts: 3,697

    Beanscoot
    Member

    Bummer. It's one thing to get stalled by a physical problem, say a giant rock where you want to excavate.

    But to be stalled by an arbitrary, perhaps unnecessary regulation is just painful.
     
    hotrodA likes this.
  17. alanp561
    Joined: Oct 1, 2017
    Posts: 5,635

    alanp561
    Member

    I don't have anything going on right now, I'll help you move back.

    Ran into a similar situation in Michigan. Bought some property through a realtor that was listed and sold to me as residential. Needed to build a pole barn and get the floor poured so we had somewhere to store all my shop stuff during the house build. Got the go ahead in writing from the building inspector, the contractor goes to pull the permits, and the same building inspection department says, "Nope, that property is zoned commercial, not residential". We had to go to the planning commission and get the property rezoned which took us five months and put us at the back of the line for the contractor's schedule. The day the contractor was supposed to start the barn, he called the building inspector for a hole depth inspection and the SOB didn't show up. Next morning, when he got to work, I was waiting in his office and told him his next move better be out to my property or my lawyer and I would see him at the next planning commission meeting. He beat me there. They poured the floor the last week of November and we set everything on pallets on green concrete the next day. Bureaucrats are not your friends.
     
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  18. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 36,094

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Loading them on a trailer like that is how the salesman who took the Buddy lifts around to different Goodguys shows hauled them. He offered to deliver the one he had on display at Puyallup Wa to my place that way and set it where I wanted it and drive out from under it.

    It looks like that hoist will need it's own bay or and extension with a higher roof on the shop.

    I never intend to move again but if I did I would be hauling every part I had that did not have a designated project that it was going on to swap meets or put them up for sale. I'm pretty well going to do that after I get the 48 to a point anyhow. Someone else can deal with those might use it someday parts.
     
  19. Ok, you guys are scaring the **** out of me. I'm planning on doing a similar move (multi state away into the outskirts of a town). I'm reading that you can't even trust the realtor OR city to even be correct on their listings/jobs......great. Who the H*LL can you trust then.
     
  20. hotrodA
    Joined: Sep 12, 2002
    Posts: 7,458

    hotrodA
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    @Mr48chev
    “It looks like that hoist will need it's own bay or and extension with a higher roof on the shop.”

    That’s one of the reasons for the 24x32 extension off the back of the existing building. In addition to providing the shop floor space, the roof will be higher than the current roof, either full length or the rear portion. The lift needs 12 feet of ceiling height to get a car all the way up. I could convert the back portion of the existing building’s trusses to scissor style trusses, but still wouldn’t have a large enough area. Pretty much forced to extend off the back.
    The only other option is to build perpendicular to the existing shop, but that is limited to 20 feet width to clear the field lines. And puts it right in the middle of the back yard, and in full view out the windows, something that is vetoed by the spouse.
    FUBAB
     
  21. GuyW
    Joined: Feb 23, 2007
    Posts: 854

    GuyW
    Member

    No one but yourself.
     
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  22. alanp561
    Joined: Oct 1, 2017
    Posts: 5,635

    alanp561
    Member

    Sorry, I didn't mean to imply that the realtor was shady; She did nothing wrong. Like anyone else, she had only the information about the property that was provided by the seller and the county.

    Another thing, make sure that the state that you're moving to has a disclosure law. Without one, the seller doesn't have to tell you anything about the property. I went through a hell of a lawsuit with a seller of a property in Alabama, which is a non-disclosure state. While the seller didn't lie to us directly, they omitted to tell us about a number of problems with the property that the bank inspector found, and the seller wouldn't fix. We got out of the contract, but the only people who made any money on the deal were the lawyers.
     
    Last edited: Dec 1, 2025
  23. GuyW
    Joined: Feb 23, 2007
    Posts: 854

    GuyW
    Member

    ^^^^^ I'd not be so quick to cut the realtor slack...
     
    mountainman2 likes this.
  24. hotrodA
    Joined: Sep 12, 2002
    Posts: 7,458

    hotrodA
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    True ^^^^^
    Caveat emptor. The selling agent wants to sell the house.
    Your realtor is getting paid to ask the questions, do the research, and protect his client, YOU.
    A paid home inspection, unless you want to climb all over everything, finds a lot of issues.
    I had two houses here with huge shops that I terminated the contracts on due to all kinds of issues, including serious mold, that the seller wouldn’t address.
     
    Last edited: Dec 1, 2025
    GuyW likes this.
  25. Lone Star Mopar
    Joined: Nov 2, 2005
    Posts: 4,236

    Lone Star Mopar
    Member

    I'll add this as well. You should personally locate & hire a trust worthy home inspector. Maybe even get a second to double check the first.
    When we bought our first home the realtor recomended the home inspector who missed (or just left out) alot of things I know now we should have been made aware of.
     
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  26. Bandit Billy
    Joined: Sep 16, 2014
    Posts: 16,259

    Bandit Billy
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Same answer to the question "who can you blame?" and "who can you please?". :cool:
    I have heard of **** getting in the way of the building process, but you literally have **** in your way! :cool::D
     
    hotrodA likes this.
  27. wraymen
    Joined: Jan 13, 2011
    Posts: 7,372

    wraymen
    Member

    I heard that if an inspector does miss a big problem all you’re likely to get back is the cost of the inspection. You’re still stuck with the repair cost that should have been on the seller.
     
  28. Keep the info coming, I need all I can get!!!!
     
  29. swade41
    Joined: Apr 6, 2004
    Posts: 14,567

    swade41
    Member
    from Buffalo,NY

    I hired an inspector to look at my place before purchase, in NY they are not held accountable for anything they miss, but you are required to get an inspection !
    Just a money grab in this state for sure.
     
    Lone Star Mopar and wraymen like this.
  30. Hey Tow Truck Tom , This was a life learning experience and marathon. As some of my other friends who moved out of Alaska via shipping containers learned a lesson. All these shipping companies bate and switch your loads even when they say that they will not be touching any contents. Well 2 of my friends who shipped via container experienced not only damage from the contents being moved from container to container even both were told nothing will be touched and once the load was transported and ready to be dropped off , these companies squeezed even more $$$ out of my freinds prompting me to take extreme moving measures and haul my own stuff.
    I experienced a great vast of knowledge in OTR owner operator truck .A great chapter in my life and glad that page has come and gone . And as mentioned , I have no regrets in my decision.
    not a decision for the dreamer nor weak at heart but now I am still sorting and arranging my new building . It was worth every stressful moment.
    Vic
     

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