Funny you mentioned the sliders. I bought some on sale today for 12 bucks they're regularly 20. These are the good ones, called Super Sliders. I didn't have to have them but they're never this cheap.I am aware of those, they’re interesting. A locksmith used a small one to pry window open for latch access. I put round sliders on the oven and leave them there sometimes just to slide it back easily. eBay they’re cheaper than Lowe’s.
When I worked with my grandfather and 1975 and earlier, he had 4, one foot squares of a material that I believe was Teflon. It was fairly stiff but you could bend it as far as you want and not break it. It was 1/8 inch thick just like VCT.Back in the day they were rare, customers would always ask where I got them, said to myself I should sell them. These days all types of varieties and almost a full bay at the box stores to choose from. And the 3M monster has the market. Amazing how some people take ideas and make a killing.
I've often used Masonite to slide furniture on. I also use it sometimes underneath my seams like I'm doing with my woven carpet at the golf resort.Sometimes we scoot appliances out, demo, grind, then push back without disconnecting plumbing. We can move appliances out of area without them in the way is what I prefer. Going over carpet, then return trip on grinded 30 grit concrete sliders would wear through the pressure points. I’ve used a sprayer to wet slab down cause there’s still dust in the porous slab and the air sled blasts it in the air.
I don’t like the height of the skat skates but no other dolly options. Just ordered two whole sets of wheels, the jackets fell off, noticed cracks in others. Left one set at customers for the island the homeowner picked up with the electrician and the granite cracked around the cooktop. One set at home in garage with a stove on it, and just bought another set from T4F, so 6 sets. I like 4 onboard to just leave on wheels, not take off and on.
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