Shipping a Beseler 45MXT - anyone done this successfully?

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BHuij

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A few years ago the planets aligned and I managed to grab 3 working Beseler 45MXT enlargers with various heads, lenses, etc. for a song on my local classifieds. One of them has been in use in my darkroom since then, and the others in storage.

I have a good friend about to take the plunge into large format, and his enlarger won't handle 4x5, so I figured I'd hook him up. Problem is, I'm in UT and he's in GA.

So I need to figure out how to get it to him (including the condenser head). Obviously the chassis can be removed from the baseboard, the head from the chassis, and I believe with some finangling, I could get the negatives stage off the chassis as well. So aside from the head, the whole thing can be made reasonably flat.

But the baseboard is quite heavy, and the condenser head both heavy and fragile.

Has anyone pulled this off before? How did you go about it?
 

randyB

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Back when I worked at a large photo store that sold 4x5 enlargers they never bought just one unless the buyer paid the freight. The company usually bought several (8-12) because the freight for 12 wasn't much more than the freight for 3. I would think that the shipping cost from UT to GA would be more than the cost of a used enlarger in GA. BUT, you could always do a road trip, GA is pretty in the Spring.
 

mshchem

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The entire bellows lens stage etc comes off in one piece, condensers one piece, lamphouse one piece. Run the motorized carriage all the way down. You need to immobilize the carriage, strapping tape or equivalent, don't let one side get out of sync with the other.

If you remove the 4 machine screws from the outside of the sides, 2 on each side this will detach the 2 baseboard rails from the carriage.

Making separate boxes for the pieces makes it UPS capable. If possible have your friend make a baseboard rather than paying for shipping, then the rails can ship in with the carriage.

If you pay UPS to package the unit it will be well cared for, otherwise pack it so it can take a fall. If you are good with cardboard it will all ship nicely. Any kind of protruding knob etc needs extra cardboard. Lots of cast aluminum so, it needs careful packaging. Shipping the bellows and the rest in smaller boxes helps. The condensers are crazy heavy.
 

mshchem

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To take everything off the carriage there's a single 1/4" bolt. This leaves both bellows negative stage intact, obviously first remove the lamphouse and the condensers.
 
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BHuij

BHuij

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Yeah I have it fully disassembled at this point. I think I may just walk into the post office during off-peak hours and see what they can do by way of boxes and packing materials to help me out. If they won't, it's probably worth paying UPS to do the job right.
 

xkaes

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As mentioned, take as much of it apart as you want/can. Then it's pretty easy to put it in three or four boxes -- the columns in one long box or tube, the baseboard in one thin flat box, etc.

Take pictures/video of taking it apart, and/or write instructions on putting things together -- marking what goes where with masking tape.
 
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