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how to load a motorcycle alone?

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  1. #1
    bluemeate started this thread.
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    how to load a motorcycle alone?

    Hey, im getting a vespa, gonna estimate the weight at 400lb, it does not run.
    I have a ford ranger and do not have a bike-specific ramp. any ideas how to make a ramp and get it up there?,
    like two 2x4's supporting a piece of plywood? I have a 4x6 pallet that i hope the little wheels could roll up alright, im just weary I dont have enough strength to push it up myself, Id rather not pay someone to come along.

    Think it would be light enough for the small little girl, previous owner to just steer while i push? i probably dont wanna put them through that.
    thoughts, people?




    Can I just bring it into the scrapyard as is? and get whole car price, i think that is a thing there.
    collecting san joses scrap

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  3. #2
    ScrappinRed's Avatar
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    No great advice on loading it, but Vespas can be worth really good money in parts, especially older models...
    ~You have to start somewhere to get anywhere~

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  5. #3
    NHscrapman's Avatar
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    If there is a small hill close by back the truck up to the hill till the tailgate touches. or you gain enough elevation in land for a board to cross the gap with little slope. Then roll bike down hill into the truck "carefully".
    There ain't nothing wrong with an honest days work. Anyone who says otherwise is a fool.- Old Man

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  7. #4
    bluemeate started this thread.
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    meh, its like a 2003 with a cracked frame, probably a ton of working parts in it. just trying to get some quick cash cuase im taking off for a few months pretty soon. i need to get rid of a whole bunch of things sitting at my parents house before I take off too, small piles of this and that, ink printer cartriges, escrap, gold clubs, a whole bunch of bike parts

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  9. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by NHscrapman View Post
    If there is a small hill close by back the truck up to the hill till the tailgate touches. Then roll bike down hill into the truck "carefully".
    Being the guy with the Pickup truck since I got my license in 74
    I was always the guy to get the call from the friends that had Motorcycles
    NHscrapman is correct
    I always understood that is why the Media Strips on 95 had the hills >> To make it easier to load the dead bikes

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  11. #6
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    Well if you had some cinder blocks and a jack maybe you could put the bike on the pallet jack up one end put a cinder block under it. Jack up the other end put a cinder block under. Keep repeating until it's high enough then push the bike into the truck.
    Last edited by Evan; 08-15-2014 at 08:13 PM.

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  13. #7
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    I'm going to jump in here and say the vespa probably weighs around 250 lbs, maybe less. Those things are small. Just lift up one end, put it in the truck, lift up the other ends and slide it in. No need to be nice since you're scrapping it.

    Edit - Also, don't have this girl do anything to help with loading. You're going to need to title as well when you take it to the yard.
    Last edited by ryanw; 08-15-2014 at 08:49 PM.

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  15. #8
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    i agree with nh on finding a hill, or something like a hill...ive backed my truck into ditches to load, then been pulled out......around my area we dont need titles to junk motor cycles or any kind of atv...im sure that depends on your area

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  17. #9
    Sirscrapalot's Avatar
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    If you can take the time an throw it up on your local CL it might go faster then you think. Down here a Vespa wouldn't last a day on CL someone would take it for parts or to fix up.

    Sirscrapalot - It's the game of life. Do I win or do I lose? One day they're gonna shut the game down. I gotta have as much fun and go around the board as many times as I can before it's my turn to leave. - Tupac Shakur

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  19. #10
    bluemeate started this thread.
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    she already tried to sell it on craigslist, no takers.
    im trying to over estimate the work so i dont go there thinking i can handle the job. it is vespa brand and in my time of scrapping, just looking at it, I feel like it had to be more than 250 lbs.... biggest dip is from the street to the driveway which isnt much at all. i got a huge half of a motorcycle in there with a friends help and that took some time... after forever, two guys in a truck passed by, pulled over and we go just picked it up and in, lol

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  21. #11
    Sirscrapalot's Avatar
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    You say she tried to sell it...for how much?

    Anyhow, your vespa you do what your comfy with. Hate to see something with parts go to a yard. A crying shame, but I understand the need to get things gone.

    Either way..good luck.

    Sirscrapalot - Over an out.

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  23. #12
    smashing's Avatar
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    I use a piece of exterior plywood. Lay it on the edge of the tailgate, tip whatever is onto it and push up into the truck. Works great on washers and dryers that aren't tall enough to reach my tail gate

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  25. #13
    Soobthang's Avatar
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    Dismantle into easier to move pieces? I just like taking things apart.

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  27. #14
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    It won't be over 250lbs. If you can't lift one end, then the other, onto the truck, then take a couple of boards--2x6 or wider, and lay them from the ground up to the truck. Then lay the scooter on the boards and use a comealong to pull it up the boards.

    Jon.

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  29. #15
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    I got a 50cc scooter, about the same size as a Vespa, an it's not 450. Closer to what the others are saying..200 to 250lbs or so. I just did as one suggested above..lifted one end, then the other. I rock a mini-van tho, not as high as a pick up usually. Lest not mine.

    My only other advice is..Very carefully.

    An yes I dig the scooters an the like, hence me hate seeing being sold for scrap.

    Sirscrapalot - Popping wheelies like they were pringle cans.

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  31. #16
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  33. #17
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    I am going with SSA's 200 lbs. If it is scrap then flip it, end on end onto the deck, no need to treat it nice.

    If it runs, then I suggest doing a wheelie up a piece of 4x2 up onto the deck, no wait, thats just what I would fail at trying to do.

    Compared to real motorcycles, a vespa weighs little more than a bag of sugar.
    If it wasn't for the laws of physics, I would be unstoppable.

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  35. #18
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    Try fleabay many listed on there with bids from £149 to £700 (auction) with time to run as restoration.
    Do a short listing and get the to pick it up insitue.
    Saves the accident thats waiting to happen happening
    More money - less effort - Work smarter not harder (£149 it would need to be 1500lbs plus to get this return)

    We call scooters 'chicken chasers' - don't know why
    Last edited by british; 08-17-2014 at 07:56 AM.

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  37. #19
    bluemeate started this thread.
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    i had a 7 foot long tabletop that we use as a gate to our side yard so i put it in the bed of my truck! then i parked in the dip between driveway and street, slid it out halfway onto the driveway and half on the bed of my truck and near level. i pushed the bike onto the tabletop, laid the bike down on the tabletop and then i pushed the table back into the bed of my truck... if it would have been too heavy, i would have just ratcheted the tabletop back into my truck

    actually reminded me of this, but much lighter, removabler and free... also doubles as a skateboard grind box!
    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10154478042630112

    OK SO NOW PROBLEM
    they filled out a CA dmv form that was change of ownership... and thats all they gave me, i realized that when i got home?
    well they have at their house a registration reciept from the dmv and its circled at the bottom where it says JUNKED
    and they told me
    "thats all they have becuase its junked so just print and provide that.
    you wont have a pinkslip cuase its junked.
    if someone wants to re-registerm they have to go back to the dmv and re-register to get proof of ownership"
    no pinkslip??? will i not be able to sell this at the scrapyard?

    also can i ask them for whole car price on the motorcycle?
    Last edited by bluemeate; 08-18-2014 at 12:58 AM.

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  39. #20
    Mechanic688's Avatar
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    will i not be able to sell this at the scrapyard?

    also can i ask them for whole car price on the motorcycle?
    I hope BigBurt can maybe help you but I've never been to your yard so I don't know how they'll treat this.
    P & M Recycling - Specializing in E-Waste Recycling.
    If you enjoy your freedom, thank a vet.

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