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Member |
Yeah, the picture isn’t the best example frankly. It was just the first one I saw that gave the general idea. | |||
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Unhyphenated American |
Pickup truck? __________________________________________________________________________________ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Always remember that others may hate you but those who hate you don't win unless you hate them. And then you destroy yourself. Richard M Nixon It's nice to be important, it's more important to be nice. Billy Joe Shaver NRA Life Member | |||
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Member |
Moved cross country 3 times with motorcycles. I am VERY attached to my bike. She even has a name | |||
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Member |
2nd time I have typed out a nice detailed (long) post & only the 1st line posts | |||
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Nosce te ipsum |
New laptop, and the trackpad is selecting text from your palm brushing against it? Then it gets deleted inadvertently when you hit "return"? | |||
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Member |
I'll give these guys a vote https://www.a1autotransport.com/motorcycles/ but I've only used them once, which was last year. Seemed to be on the affordable side and they'll give you a price up front so you can compare. | |||
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Thank you Very little |
Based on your comments of not wanting to tow it and over concerns on the putting in the truck bed then I'd sell it and buy another when you get to your new home. | |||
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Member |
I bought my current bike about 11 or so years ago. I live in Utah, and I bought it from a guy in Trenton, New Jersey. I researched bike specific shipping companies and was ready to go that route. I found a small company out of Arizona that was able to arrange and ship with the same company I was ready to go with, for around $100 cheaper than the company quoted me. I believe it ended up being around $275 or so to ship the bike. It arrived in perfect condition and the company specialized in motorcycles. There were several in the covered trailer and they have these cool wheel chocks that they lock your bike in place with. The hydraulic lift made unloading simple and painless. The driver told me that he brings his personal bike along on his treks so that he can scoot around on it during his nights when he isn't driving. It's easy enough to load and unload for the driver to bring his own bike. That says something to me, and the companies that ship motorcycles. All in all, it was a painless and simple process to ship. My bike is a Yamaha Road Star Warrior, for what it's worth. Not a small, or uber light weight bike. It's long and the handlebars are wide. Very good experience. I'm sure the cost of shipping has risen in the past years, but just wanted to give you my feedback from when I had to ship my bike cross country. | |||
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Member |
I would load it in my pickup. Ask a local small engine sales/repair place to use their pickup height loading ramp, they should have one. Use double tie downs in each corner and check at fuel stops. Research online, proper motorcycle tiedown procedures. | |||
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