



Those aren't moving boxes. Federal crime to use those USPS boxes for "personal" reasonsThe post office will drop flat rate postage boxes on your doorstep for free.
^^^This^^^I work in the moving and storage industry and have since 1981. I have moved hundreds of boxes from every brand and never emptied a drawer. Never had a customer want them emptied either. I have the customer lock them then I shrink wrap it then pad wrap and shrink wrap again. Some customers ask for cardboard as well which goes on after the pads and before the second shrink wrap. I have NEVER paid a claim on a toolbox. With proper help you can roll it up the loading ramp. Good luck with your move.
The ramps on uhaul trucks are rated for 1000 pounds. There is a safety margin built into that. Working in the moving industry I have loaded many rental trucks for customers. Loaded toolboxes , grand pianos , etc. The heaviest item was a 1400 pound safe. Ramp was fine and no one died.Unless they’ve changed things recently, the ramps on Uhaul trucks are rated for less than a thousand pounds. Most double bay boxes are 400 pounds or more when empty.....
Unless you are planning to mail those tools, misuse of US Postal boxes is a Federal Offense.The post office will drop flat rate postage boxes on your doorstep for free. https://store.usps.com/store/result...ping-supplies/_/N-alnx4jZ7d0v8v?No=0&Nrpp=18& You could use a vacuum sealer,or even ziploc bags to keep a bit of organization.
See enough idiots trying to roll stuff up them that shouldn't... Ramp twists a little and then the load goes over the side. Sometimes the idiots try and stop things from going over the side....Not much the average person can do to stop a 1000+ pound tool box going over sideways when it happens.The ramps on uhaul trucks are rated for 1000 pounds. There is a safety margin built into that. Working in the moving industry I have loaded many rental trucks for customers. Loaded toolboxes , grand pianos , etc. The heaviest item was a 1400 pound safe. Ramp was fine and no one died.
Not saying it couldn't happen, but my defense would be all items are pre-packaged ,to be listed at a later date on eBay, and will be shipped in the appropriate box. I doubt the Postmaster General has a team staking out my garage.Unless you are planning to mail those tools, misuse of US Postal boxes is a Federal Offense.
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Terms and Conditions
I understand that Priority Mail Express™, Priority Mail®, Global Express Guaranteed®, Priority Mail Express International™ and Priority Mail International® packaging is the property of the United States Postal Service and is provided solely for sending Priority Mail Express™, Priority Mail®, Global Express Guaranteed®, Priority Mail Express International™ and Priority Mail International®. Misuse may be a violation of federal law."
Not moving far (30 miles) but moving to a VERY rural property. The last couple miles of road is very rough and hilly.I think a lot depends on how far you’re moving and how many tools you have. Cross country moving is a bit harder to do without stuff banging around and getting damaged so it pays to take care and pack stuff more deliberately. Across town? I’d just make sure everything is strapped in safe.
A smaller single bay box is pretty easy to move loaded. Triple bank or something gets a bit heavy.
I personally use pallets and a forklift to move my tools, but that’s not feasible for a home shop. However, if you rent a truck with a lift gate a pallet jack is cheap to rent and makes moving a truckload of pallets fast and easy. Might be worth doing if you have concrete on both sides of the move.
I never unloaded my boxes when I’ve moved, longest I’ve had to move them was only 50 miles though.
Lock the drawers, stretch wrap the **** out of it and I prefer to put the box up on 4x4s so the bounce loads don’t overload the casters and their mounts. Distribute the load across the bottom of the box and you’ll be less likely to bend or flex the sheet metal when you hit a big bump and the whole box dynamically loads the wheels. Plus it won’t try to roll.
i did this 5ish years ago but no lids, didn't have a good way to get the box loaded full or I would haveI bought a bunch of used 5 gallon buckets and filled each one until they weighed about right. I wrapped up what had to be and put lids on. That was 25 years ago.


What's that little truck you got called? It looks like a workbench on wheels.I bought a bunch of these shallow crates from Epstein's. They had a Malco tool shipment arrive packed in these and have been selling off the crates as they empty. They're US made by edgemanufacturing.com and have a 150lb. weight capacity and stack nicely. Normally they're $30 ea. new. I made a bulk purchase from Epstein's for $10 ea. I primarily bought them for an upcoming move to put tools, car and motorcycle parts in
It's a Suzuki Carry which are made for the Japanese domestic market and referred to as Kei trucks or Keitora. There are several different brands (Honda Acty, Subaru Sambar, Daihatsu Hijet) but basically to be a kei truck, the engine size is limited to 660cc and there are overall size requirements. They also come in variations with dump beds and scissor lifts. Typically they're 4wd and their small size is to accommodate very narrow city streets as well as rough mountainous terrain. They're the work horses of Japan. You see them everywhere there. I read somewhere that 40% of all vehicles in Japan are kei trucksWhat's that little truck you got called? It looks like a workbench on wheels.![]()
25 years ago, they put my 17' boat & trailer into (and out of) a moving van the exact same way.me and two ”professional” movers loaded my Matco two bay box into the back of a Penske truck, it was rough, but we got it loaded, the better way is to hire a rollback. They winch it up on their bed, then back up to the moving truck and use the truck‘s under lift wheel lift (not sure my terminology is correct) to lift up the back of their truck to match the height of the moving truck, you might still be pushing uphill, but it’ll be much less that’s trying to push it up the ramp.
Well, perhaps he was going to mail them to himself but inadvertently packed things in front of them and couldn't find them when he was ready to ship.Those aren't moving boxes. Federal crime to use those USPS boxes for "personal" reasons. Intended for mail service only. That's why they started putting the logo also on the inside (plain brown side). Ebay and online sellers were flipping them inside out and using them elsewhere.
@autobon7 ...if we're talking a lot of tools, and you can't leave 'em in a drawer (putting crumbled up newspaper in each drawer will help bouncing around) for a short move. Get a bundle of blank newsprint paper and used "book" boxes from a moving company. Dump a drawer, or a small bundle of tools on the paper and roll them up diagonally. If a box gets too heavy, just fill halfway and then cut upwards on all four corners and fold over and tape, you don't have to fill a box. Common way among professional movers when packing tools and free weights.
Back in the day the uhaul ramps were almost as long as the box, made it way easier to roll heavy things into the truck. Nowadays the ramps are short as hell.The ramps on uhaul trucks are rated for 1000 pounds. There is a safety margin built into that. Working in the moving industry I have loaded many rental trucks for customers. Loaded toolboxes , grand pianos , etc. The heaviest item was a 1400 pound safe. Ramp was fine and no one died.