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Pry bar larger than 60"?

dowmace

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Apr 30, 2012
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596
Location
KCMO
I service and install generators for a living, from small home standy 15kw, all the way up to the 1mw and bigger.

I usually crane them off the truck and onto a concrete pad but often enough they need some massaging to get perfectly in place. I've got a 72" rock bar that I use a lot. I've also come to use my 36" snap on indexable bar too but I am looking for a very nice very large pry bar. The biggest one I can get from the truck is a 60" I'd really like a 72" or bigger pry bar with a nice handle on it, preferably in GREEN!


Anybody know where I might find one? I haven't been able to find one bigger than 60" really anywhere.
 
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Quick01GT

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Feb 7, 2012
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124
Location
SoCal
I have a Matco adjustable indexable one, not sure of the part number but it extends longer than 60" and is BADASS! I'm a union ironworker by the way and have been using it everyday for the past 6 months with zero issues.
 

dr_clyde

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Jan 7, 2009
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6,460
Location
Holland, MI
Prybars aren't exactly rocket surgery. Just fab up a nice custom one to suit your needs. I have a bunch of custom made prybars. Once you get above a certain size, stuff like heat treat and steel alloy matter less because the human input doesn't change proportionate to the strength of the steel as the bar gets bigger.
 

blacK20

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Mar 19, 2011
Messages
652
Do you need the curved tip of a handled prybar? If not, what's wrong with just a big wrecking bar.
 

Danglerb

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Sep 6, 2007
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9,736
Location
SoCal
Talking about something solid on a smooth surface, maybe a pry bar with a VERY short lip/nose/beak whatever its called so the length of the lever creates much more force with little lift.
 
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Hpozzuoli

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Dec 11, 2013
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3,428
Location
Rhode Island
I move very heavey objects (commercial washers). I use a piano bar. Basically a long bar with little wheels on the end. There's are a little tip on the end to help get under and lift the object. I use this to pull these machines off their bases for repair work or to line new machines up with their mounting studs. Much the same thing you are doing. I know you want a nicer looking Prybar but there isn't one out there. I searched because I was looking for the same thing. To be honest I don't think a regular Prybar would move any of these machines. It would just bend and eventually snap. If I remember I will snap a pic next time I am at the store. I keep them there. Too big to lug around.
 

ez-duzit

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Joined
Jun 24, 2013
Messages
5,101
Location
Marina del Rey
Had a professional machinery mover move my lathe and vertical mill (2,000 lbs) into my shop. His family has been in that business for over 100 years. And he used just a large, simple bar with a bent tip, no wheels or other embellishments.
 

A_Pmech

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Joined
May 8, 2007
Messages
8,002
Location
IL
Had a professional machinery mover move my lathe and vertical mill (2,000 lbs) into my shop. His family has been in that business for over 100 years. And he used just a large, simple bar with a bent tip, no wheels or other embellishments.

It's called a nose bar.

:)
 

mechan

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Joined
Apr 16, 2009
Messages
401
I move very heavey objects (commercial washers). I use a piano bar. Basically a long bar with little wheels on the end. There's are a little tip on the end to help get under and lift the object. I use this to pull these machines off their bases for repair work or to line new machines up with their mounting studs. Much the same thing you are doing. I know you want a nicer looking Prybar but there isn't one out there. I searched because I was looking for the same thing. To be honest I don't think a regular Prybar would move any of these machines. It would just bend and eventually snap. If I remember I will snap a pic next time I am at the store. I keep them there. Too big to lug around.

Johnson Bar.... ?

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_D1sP-NndkqU/SqpX7Z0nzOI/AAAAAAAAQ4E/AOQEIyG2haE/s400/IMG_9004.jpg

http://www.mtviewsupply.com/rental/...AR 4250 LB__2012-05-19_04_17_13_34-025[1].jpg
 

dos zetas

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Joined
Dec 2, 2013
Messages
133
Location
dusty cowtown 79842
I have a railroad bar 7 feet long, one end is sharp and the other is a wedge, with a split for pulling spikes.
No idea if they are still made.
 
OP
D

dowmace

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Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
596
Location
KCMO
A riggers nose bar looks to be very close to what I want.

I can't use a johnson bar because some of the are going on pads that are maybe a 1 foot of excess around the genset so theres no way to use the wheels. I have a digging bar that gets used often but was really hoping to find a bent tip bar, the mayhew is very nice and probably as close as I can get.
 

justanengineer

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Apr 5, 2011
Messages
7,722
Location
Motor City
Maybe its just me, but I buy big pry bars whenever theyre reasonably cheap simply bc I never seem to have one thats "just right" for the job at hand. I just bought two more (36" and 48" IIRC) last weekend for $6 each. Not sure if theres a difference, but I always called them pinch bars with the curved tip, not nose bars. Tire spoons are also very handy to keep around...
 
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