h a l f b a k e r yAlmost as great as sliced bread.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Packing a car for moving is sometimes an exercise in micro-adjustments, putting this box in just-so, finding out how many pairs of socks can be crammed beneath the folded rear seats, etc. It sometimes involves things like realizing that the TV (once properly padded) is two inches bigger in all dimensions
than you alloted for it, etc.
What I propose is a lightweight molded packing space that is just less than the size of a car's actual available packing space (these tough plastic shells would be orderable by mail), so all that arrangement and rearrangement can be done inside, while the packers remain unassaulted by weather or ruffians. Once you've come up with an arrangement that seems workable, you can take a photograph / make a sketch, and then efficiently recreate the arrangement in the actual car.
In the alternative, if the packing shell (and the packers) were strong enough, the thing could simply be strapped / zipped / plastic wrapped to prevent spillage, and the whole thing hoisted out to the waiting car, slipped neatly into the space it was designed to replicate.
Car trolley
Car_20Shopping_20Cart Kind of similar idea [fridge duck, Dec 02 2005]
[link]
|
|
This sounds like more trouble than just packing the car (twice). |
|
|
Obligatory "I thought..." post: |
|
|
I thought this would be a nasal appendage, to practice for when we all evolve noses like elephants... |
|
|
Most grocery wholesalers use a software package that mimics the interior of various kinds of trucks. Just load the software, tell it what products you're sticking in it (it has a product dimension database) and it creates a loading map to get the most out of the truck. |
|
|
Seems to me that that could be adapted. |
|
| |