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Mobile homes under pole barn

Luthi LLC

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2023
Messages
10
Location
Oregon
I have a demolition job coming up with 4 Mobile homes under a pole barn (with just a roof no tin on the sides of barn)

How would you go about getting the single wide trailers out from under the pole barn without demoing the barn?
They have no axles or tires just frames sitting on gravel.

The 1 end of the barn has no poles so i thought about dragging them out with the big hoe id also use to demo them with.

Thoughts? Thanks!
 

Luthi LLC

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2023
Messages
10
Location
Oregon
What size of hoe do you think I need to drag out single wide trailers ?

And just wrap chain around frame?
 

Luthi LLC

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2023
Messages
10
Location
Oregon
You think the frame will hold out if I drag them with a chain ? Or just rip out the frame
 

OzDozer

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
2,207
Location
Perth, Western Australia.
Occupation
Semi-Retired ..
Round up several straight lengths of 2" pipe that are a couple of feet wider than the mobile homes.

Lift one end and roll some sections of pipe under the frames. Do the same the other end (room permitting).

Hook onto homes and pull, then as the pipes roll out at the rear, bring them around to the front of the homes.

This will only work of course, if the ground is firm enough for the pipes to roll on without digging in.
 

skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
7,691
Location
washington
I moved a shed like that. @OzDozer , if you put down 2x6 runners in the direction of travel things move easily. Maybe 4 of them across. That's a lot of surface area.
@Luthi LLC
The frame has no reason to tear off the house, unless the house is dragging on stuff that is sticking up higher. It will come along for the ride. If you go the pipe route a smaller machine can drag it, but I see your desire to get a 9 ton machine and demo loading with something that small is miserable.
Rent a 120 at least for that. If there is not enough money for that then to heck with that job. if you cant make money renting for a few days or a week then the price is too low.
 

Delmer

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 3, 2013
Messages
8,891
Location
WI
I'd round up some 5-6" round wood fence posts if you're in a livestock area, or round logs if they're easier to find. Even if they won't roll, the frame will slide better on wood than dragging in the gravel. If you can lift one end enough to get under the middle, then lifting one end and adding blocks 4' front of middle, then lifting the other end and raising the blocks 4' rear of middle, will lift with much less weight. If you can't lift with the equipment, get under with a hydraulic jack to get the center on blocks.
 

OzDozer

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Jan 18, 2007
Messages
2,207
Location
Perth, Western Australia.
Occupation
Semi-Retired ..
I moved a 20,000 gallon (91,000 litre) concrete water tank in the late 1960's, with my D6C, by dragging it on two big logs.
The tank had become useless because the bore near it, had run dry. So the farmer wanted to move it about a mile (1.6kms) to a new location where he could use it.

I prepared a new pad for it at the new location, then we cut a couple of nice big whitegum logs and took them to the tank.
I slipped a corner of the blade gingerly under the outside lower section of the tank and slowly raised it off the ground.

This tank had been constructed in-situ with forms and was only about 3"-4" (75-100mm) thick concrete.
I fully expected the tank to collapse when I lifted it (and we'd considered that problem and the farmer didn't care if it fell apart, because it was relatively useless to him where it was) - but amazingly, it stayed in one piece (it was mesh reinforced) as I lifted it about 2' (600mm) off the ground.

We rolled the logs under it in a V-fashion and we hooked 2 chains to the logs and coupled them to the ripper on the D6C.
I set off steadily, dragging the tank across smooth hard paddocks (fields) for the entire distance (it was mid-Summer) and when I got to the new site, the tank was dragged onto the new pad, and the log installation procedure was reversed.

We leveled the gouge marks made by the logs and shovelled some sand around under the tank to provide a satisfactory base, then lowered the tank down again.
The operation was 100% successful, the farmer was very pleased, and I believe that tank is still in use.
 

crane operator

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2009
Messages
8,326
Location
sw missouri
If the trailers are sitting on the frames, there will still be welded tabs for the axle mount bolts hanging down. They will act like a rake dragging in, if you try to just pull them on gravel. I would do the pipes under the frame.
 

Old Doug

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2013
Messages
4,550
Location
Mo
A buddy of mine bought a place were they had built a building/house around a single wide trailer . The trailer wasnt connected to the building . We cut it up with a sawzall and carried it out a small door.
 

CM1995

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Jan 21, 2007
Messages
13,392
Location
Alabama
Occupation
Running what I brung and taking what I win
Any pics?

A 200 size hoe will handle it nicely. House trailer frames are surprisingly stout or at least the ones I have demo'd. I had a hell of a time splitting the frame with our 953 once, those cross members are tougher than I thought they would be.

Are the trailers sitting on the ground or on blocks? Is there any tie down strapping?

Do they still have the tongues? If so then wrap a heavy chain around the tongue and attach to a clevis on the bucket. Go slow and easy dragging them out. You also need a spotter or two, 1 on either side to watch as you slowly drag it out.
 

Acoals

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Dec 15, 2019
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Wisconsin
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Jack of all trades/Master of none
House trailer frames are surprisingly stout or at least the ones I have demo'd. I had a hell of a time splitting the frame with our 953 once, those cross members are tougher than I thought they would be.

I usually fold the frames up with my hoe, and drop it in the dump truck. A bigger (Newer) mobile home frame might need to get cut in a couple places, I use a gas concrete saw with a metal blade.
 

Willie B

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Jan 2, 2016
Messages
4,063
Location
Mount Tabor VT
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Electrician
You also are destroying the mobile homes?
Knock it in a heap, then separate steel from trash. I once demolished a mobile home in two seconds with a backhoe. Just swing the hoe.

In that case I wasted valuable time trying to save the steel frame. It too was so frail I inadvertently bent it to scrap.

You want a thumb to make the job efficient, as little air in the dumpster as possible. Size of the excavator only affects time on the job.
 

CM1995

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Jan 21, 2007
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13,392
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Alabama
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Running what I brung and taking what I win
I usually fold the frames up with my hoe, and drop it in the dump truck.

That was back in '07 or '08 using our 953 as it was the only machine capable we could put on the tag trailer and truck it down a narrow driveway. Made easy work of it but the frame was stronger than I expected it to be. Haven't had the opportunity to demo another one since.

A 320 hoe would slay one.
 

westerner

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 30, 2020
Messages
195
Location
Northern Arizona
Hook onto homes and pull, then as the pipes roll out at the rear, bring them around to the front of the homes.
I did this very job on my place years ago. Old telephone poles, 8-10 inch diameter. The Case 580K had no trouble dragging it out from under the canopy, or smashing it into the rolloff.
 

Camshawn

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Joined
Jan 25, 2017
Messages
601
Location
Langley BC
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retired
Find, borrow a mobile home axel and a spring set (any axel could work). Lift one end with your hoe and a chain. Use a couple of blocks , lift one end and sea saw if you need to get enough height to get the axel under. Bolt one end of the spring hanger to the axel mounting point and drag it out. Worked for me to move one. Cam
 

MG84

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 6, 2023
Messages
682
Location
Virginia
A buddy of mine bought a place were they had built a building/house around a single wide trailer . The trailer wasnt connected to the building . We cut it up with a sawzall and carried it out a small door.
I had a buddy back in college that did something similar. Due to zoning or some other permitting issue they wouldn’t let him build a new house on the lot, but it had a mobile home on it. They did allow him to build a ‘structure’ over/around it to protect the failing mobile home. The structure was basically framed out as you would a house and eventually he tore the mobile home down inside, and framed out his new house. It was done very nicely and now you couldn’t tell it from an all new construction stick built home, inside or out. Not sure about his standing with the local govt after that stunt however...
 

Old Doug

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Oct 16, 2013
Messages
4,550
Location
Mo
My buddy saved the structure we dug out around it and poured a footer. It is a very nice home now. Its far away from any one telling you what you can and cant do.
 
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