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Author: Subject: Cheapest way to collect new body?
McLannahan

posted on 21/11/08 at 04:22 PM Reply With Quote
Cheapest way to collect new body?

Afternoon all - I need to pickup a full body for my Fury. I've had a quote for a delivery firm based near the chap (South London and I'm Salisbury - about 110 miles) but it's a lot of money.

Can anyone recommend someone cheaply or should I bite the bullet and pay the delivery firm he uses (which are trustworthy and reliable etc...)

I can't take anytime off work to pick it up unless I could leave after work one day and travel down in something hired (and fast!)

I need to pick it up within a week too so timing is critical!

Thanks all

Michael






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mr henderson

posted on 21/11/08 at 04:59 PM Reply With Quote
Volvo estate, roof rack, job done

John

[Edited on 21/11/08 by mr henderson]






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Litemoth

posted on 21/11/08 at 05:09 PM Reply With Quote
Really big Jiffy bag?


Hire a Transit (luton with tail lift) or a flatbed or flatbed trailer with van or phone around your local hauliers and explain what you want. Some will do it as a part load if your're lucky on the route.

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IDONTBELEIVEIT

posted on 21/11/08 at 05:51 PM Reply With Quote
sounds very dangerous on public roads with other road users around

quote:

Volvo estate, roof rack, job done


quote:

[Edited on 21/11/08 by mr henderson]



[Edited on 21/11/08 by IDONTBELEIVEIT]





Are We There Yet, Are We There Yet!!!!

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Paul (Notts)

posted on 21/11/08 at 05:58 PM Reply With Quote
quote:

bite the bullet and pay the delivery firm he uses (which are trustworthy and reliable etc...)



by the time you have hired a van ,payed for petrol , taken time off work spent several hours on the road - delivery seems worth it.






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blakep82

posted on 21/11/08 at 06:09 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Paul (Notts)
quote:

bite the bullet and pay the delivery firm he uses (which are trustworthy and reliable etc...)



by the time you have hired a van ,payed for petrol , taken time off work spent several hours on the road - delivery seems worth it.


I'd have said hire a van, but paul makes a good point





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dickie b

posted on 21/11/08 at 06:13 PM Reply With Quote
Sorry to jump in (especially, being able to offer no advice at all !) but if you have the old bodywork to get rid of, I would be interested ?

Im building a k-series live axle Fury.. very slowly..

cheers
Richard

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McLannahan

posted on 21/11/08 at 06:15 PM Reply With Quote
Sadly I can't take time off during the day - would have to zoom up after work which nearly makes that option a no-goer!

Thanks for the suggestions so far guys.

Anyone else any suggestions?






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McLannahan

posted on 21/11/08 at 06:42 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by dickie b
Sorry to jump in (especially, being able to offer no advice at all !) but if you have the old bodywork to get rid of, I would be interested ?

Im building a k-series live axle Fury.. very slowly..

cheers
Richard


Richard - u2 sent round to your computer to sing some classics....






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mr henderson

posted on 21/11/08 at 07:01 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by IDONTBELEIVEIT
sounds very dangerous on public roads with other road users around

quote:

Volvo estate, roof rack, job done


quote:

[Edited on 21/11/08 by mr henderson]



[Edited on 21/11/08 by IDONTBELEIVEIT]


As the owner of a Volvo 960 estate, that has been used to carry chassis etc, I stand by advice that something as light as a fibreglass body, properly secured to a proper roof rack with suitable ratchet straps is perfectly and entirely safe to go on public roads.

John






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McLannahan

posted on 21/11/08 at 07:54 PM Reply With Quote
Thanks for the suggestion John but it is a Fury body - Would it all fit? I could see a seven body fitting?






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mr henderson

posted on 21/11/08 at 08:06 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by McLannahan
Thanks for the suggestion John but it is a Fury body - Would it all fit? I could see a seven body fitting?


It may be wider than a seven body, but I'd be surprised if it was wider than a Volvo 960.

I ackowledge that it isn't ideal, but if it was something that I needed to do, I wouldn't hesitate

John






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Benzine

posted on 21/11/08 at 08:16 PM Reply With Quote
Volvo 960s are awesome






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Litemoth

posted on 21/11/08 at 08:54 PM Reply With Quote
Roofrack? - You must be dreaming!!

If you go to all of the trouble of lifting it onto a (real bloody substantial) roofrack and suffer the stress and aggro not to mention gouges and scratches and hernia, why not get a flat bed trailer (at max £40/day) and make a good job of it.

I you've not got the time then you might as well bite the bullet and get the pros to do it (that's 'professionals' not 'prostitutes' besides prostitutes are hopeless at lifting heavy bodies.......come to think of it that's exactly what they do for a living but they would get lipstick and nail scratches all over it.

We used to get heavy machinery moved around the country by local hauliers all the time - you'd probably pay relatively little if you could negotiate a part load i.e. you hire empty space on a wagon that was doing roughly that route anyway travelling empty or with less than a full load.

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mr henderson

posted on 21/11/08 at 09:17 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Litemoth
Roofrack? - You must be dreaming!!

If you go to all of the trouble of lifting it onto a (real bloody substantial) roofrack and suffer the stress and aggro not to mention gouges and scratches and hernia, why not get a flat bed trailer (at max £40/day) and make a good job of it.




As someone who has already sucessfully moved items of this nature in this manner, no I am not dreaming. The item itself is a lot less likely to get scratched that way than entrusting it to carriers.

Just how much do you think the body will weigh that it would be a problem for two blokes to lift it onto a roofrack?

As for damage to the car, well, my Volvo cost me £550 complete with a long MOT. It was bought specifically for the purpose of moving stuff like this around (it has a towbar as well) and has proved to do the job very well, albeit at the cost of around 6 miles to the litre!

John






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dickie b

posted on 21/11/08 at 09:37 PM Reply With Quote
I moved a Fury chassis on top of my old Alfa 155 on a Thule roofrack. The chassis was lashed to the roofrack, but also supported on the roof itself by larger foam blocks as added support.

The whole lot was then held on by ratchets secured around the roof panel (windows lowered an inch) as an extra measure.

Never moved, no wobbles, no damage at all.

I wouldn't hesitate to do it again, but naturally drove with extra care and caution (not that I er.. dont anyway)

New GRP is much more fragile mind and airflow over the car would shake it about no end.

May be a daft suggestion but would a horsebox do the job?

Neighhh!!

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mangogrooveworkshop

posted on 22/11/08 at 12:04 AM Reply With Quote
Ive moved a whole seven less the engine on top of the minty metro given to us when we came back to blighty..........






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JamJah

posted on 22/11/08 at 02:27 AM Reply With Quote
Backhauling is cheaper than part load.
Find a company who manufactures near you. If they are delievering to London then they are empty on the way back. Far cheaper and easier than finding a part load that happens to be on your route.
Other than that there is a white van man in the Southern Daily Echo advertising at £50 a day.





This is personal advise or personal opinion.
Constructive comments gratefully recieved, picking is left for noses.

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matt_gsxr

posted on 22/11/08 at 08:31 AM Reply With Quote
I collected Phoenix bodywork in a standard (not long-wheelbase) transit style van.

Long wheelbase would have been better, but I put the bonnet section ontop of the main tub.

It cost £43 for the hire (oxford van rental). Fuel was another £30 or so. I picked up the van after work on Friday, and did the 240 mile round trip just like you. These small modern vans are great (quiet, fast, economical).

You think you haven't got any time, but actually you just need to sleep less. I am working on giving up sleep altogether. I will get loads done, and although I will be grumpy all the time that can be someone elses problem. ;-)

Matt

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stevebubs

posted on 22/11/08 at 12:16 PM Reply With Quote
I've moved a Fury bonnet on a roofrack (Omega). Wouldn't try moving a complete body in the same fashion...it will get damaged for sure...

Van or flatbed trailer is the only real option, I'm afraid....

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ashg

posted on 22/11/08 at 12:59 PM Reply With Quote
i have had a silva riot r1 on the roof rack on a 250mile trip and it was totally fine. chassis weighed about 70ish kg
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mr henderson

posted on 22/11/08 at 01:51 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by stevebubs
I've moved a Fury bonnet on a roofrack (Omega). Wouldn't try moving a complete body in the same fashion...it will get damaged for sure...

Van or flatbed trailer is the only real option, I'm afraid....


IYHO?






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Litemoth

posted on 22/11/08 at 03:46 PM Reply With Quote
This is turning into "The Great Roofrack Challenge"

Don't get me wrong, I've overloaded roofracks and trailers and driven home clenching my cheeks and bricking it wondering if the little chinese bolts and Bacofoil brackets will withstand the force of the air trying to rip your load off.

The bottom line is, if it comes off and goes sailing through the windscreen of a minibus carrying blind, one-legged Somali orphans, you'll be asked by a judge to say whether you thought carrying a car body on your roofrack was a "reasonable" thing to do and to show how the roofrack manufacturer is going to back you up and show where your insurance schedule covers this .....




......For the sake of of 40 of Her Majesy's English Pounds and a few hours off?


I think not

[Edited on 22/11/08 by Litemoth]

[Edited on 22/11/08 by Litemoth]

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stevebubs

posted on 22/11/08 at 06:33 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by mr henderson
quote:
Originally posted by stevebubs
I've moved a Fury bonnet on a roofrack (Omega). Wouldn't try moving a complete body in the same fashion...it will get damaged for sure...

Van or flatbed trailer is the only real option, I'm afraid....


IYHO?


Of course

However, don't forget...

- Fury tub is everything just forward of the windscreen to the back of the car.

- Fury Bonnet itself is the size of most car roofs

So...if you think you can load all of this on top of the car and get it secure enough that it won't flap / move / crack the gelcoat then feel free.... but would you risk the best part of £2K?

On top of the above, you've the doors and the side pods.... but these will easily fit inside an estate / large hatch with foldy seats...

If I thought it could be done safely then I'd offer to do it myself (have a new Mondeo Estate and company fuel card) in exchange for his bonnet....

[Edited on 22/11/08 by stevebubs]

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McLannahan

posted on 23/11/08 at 05:22 PM Reply With Quote
Thanks for all the suggestions guys.

I've often thought having an old estate would be SO handy but like others I'm not that confident that an estate could hold a whole Fury body.

Sadly I cannot take time off work to do this (I'm a teacher at the moment) and don't think I could manage to do it after work one day.

It's looking likely that I'll have to use his recommended courier Expensive but it must be collected this week and I've run out of options I think?

Thanks everyone






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