Moving Stuff: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "==What About Moving Stuff== Heavy? No wheels? Flat tires? Steep hill? Stuck in mud? Can't move it. Look. How easy is it is to grab a pen and walk a mile? Relatively easy. ...") |
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Just add some handles, dang it. It saves a lot of moving frustration and minimizes the risk of severe injury. | Just add some handles, dang it. It saves a lot of moving frustration and minimizes the risk of severe injury. | ||
==Workarounds== | |||
Sometimes there's a tough tradeoff between movability and performance. For example, if you have a flat steel table to do work on, then adding a hook on the middle of the table prevents you from placing large objects flat on the table. The hook is nice to hoist and move the table with, but if your workpiece is high-centered and wobbling, that's no good. | |||
Hooks on the side or underneath the table can work, but adds some moving difficulty. It's possible to cut a square hole in the middle of the table and then add a round handle or hook underneath the table that is still accessible from above. Mildly more difficult to move, but at least large stuff can be placed on the table. | |||
Sometimes workarounds for movability are not so easily conceptualized. Other times it seems nigh impossible. Those times will bring out your ability to effectively compromise between important traits of hardware. | |||
Best of luck moving stuff~ |
Revision as of 19:39, 13 January 2013
What About Moving Stuff
Heavy? No wheels? Flat tires? Steep hill? Stuck in mud?
Can't move it.
Look. How easy is it is to grab a pen and walk a mile? Relatively easy.
Can you walk the same distance with a laptop computer? Yes, but mildly harder.
What about with a desktop computer? Maybe. It'll hurt.
A standard size refrigerator? No.
Without Power Tools
Let's first consider moving stuff without power tools. We do this all the time.
Clothing! It just hangs onto us everywhere we go.
When we move things close to the center of our body (like how we move our clothing), it can seem effortless.
But start holdings things farther and farther away from your body and the lever action will really take a toll on your body.
Once our back starts bending we lose more and more stability and the bodily danger level jumps rather quickly. Ever tried bending over to pick something off the ground without bending your knees? The back strain!
Anyway- it's good to pay attention to the lever action and how strained and contorted the body is becoming when anyone tries to move stuff. Read the principles on this- it'll save your body- keeping your back straight and bending your knees and so on.
Handles
Our hands are a great way to hold and move stuff. Handles are often the difference between moving something with ease or difficulty.
Handles don't need to be exactly hand-fitting or solely as a handle. If you coil up an extension cord you find yourself a nice hole to slide your arm or hand into for carrying the long thing. A laptop computer doesn't have a handle but it's not so bad carrying it under one arm. Pens are small enough to just be handle-able.
But other times, especially with heavier objects, a handle is a must. A full, heavy tool box would be much less useful without a nice handle at the top or side.
Then Again
Many times, objects that don't get moved much don't have handles. Refrigerators, for instance, usually don't have a transportation-dedicated handle. Often, people have to find well-shaped contours and grooves to hold onto as a team to move really heavy stuff.
The rationale is probably that it's not worth the effort to add a handle function to something that doesn't move during its use (like furniture), but in practice we really should be making all parts of our technical system easy as possible. It's going to get moved. Make moving it easy.
Just add some handles, dang it. It saves a lot of moving frustration and minimizes the risk of severe injury.
Workarounds
Sometimes there's a tough tradeoff between movability and performance. For example, if you have a flat steel table to do work on, then adding a hook on the middle of the table prevents you from placing large objects flat on the table. The hook is nice to hoist and move the table with, but if your workpiece is high-centered and wobbling, that's no good.
Hooks on the side or underneath the table can work, but adds some moving difficulty. It's possible to cut a square hole in the middle of the table and then add a round handle or hook underneath the table that is still accessible from above. Mildly more difficult to move, but at least large stuff can be placed on the table.
Sometimes workarounds for movability are not so easily conceptualized. Other times it seems nigh impossible. Those times will bring out your ability to effectively compromise between important traits of hardware.
Best of luck moving stuff~