This is how you move them. I see no reason that you couldn't use a manly floor jack to lift one end of the container. Heck, my cheap finger smashing 2-ton floor jack should have the power to lift one end. The 6-ton big dog will do better.
I lifted a full container by digging a hole at each end, then cribbed up with 4X4 & 6x6 blocking, put a 20 ton bottle jack on top of this and put some 1" plate between ram & bottom of container to distribute the load & lifted.
Did a combination of putting RR ties under the ends & slid the whole thing 6" sideways.
Slow but still faster than unloading the container.
It has settled about 6" over 3 years but still level.
Highbeam, I'm amazed that you would offer to bring your dozer down to Texas to help me out, you truely are a good guy. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif I don't have one yet, I'm headed up there this Saturday and clear off a spot and see what I have to work with. I went to the Dentist yesterday and found out the cost of a container could fit easily in my mouth, so it may get pushed back a month or two. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif
I moved out chicken coop with 2 4" pipes a little longer than the with of coop and my jd 212 and the wife and kids.
I jacked up one end and put one pipe under it put a chain around whole coop and hooked to tractor pulled it till it just tipped down in front had wife and kids walk to back of coop front tipped up put 2nd pipe in pulled till 1st pipe came out back brough it around to the front had family walk to back rolled under again angled the pipes a little to turn it 90 degrees and in to place the kids had fun with their enclosed sesaw had to do this qute a few times to move the 150 or 200ft
I just moved 4 containers (old truck bodies) on to a packed gravel bed at my property...used treated 2x6 "sleepers" layed flat under the boxes to maintain alignment and allow me to slide the boxes into position...
This keeps them a bit higher than the surrounding ground, promoting drainage and air circulation, allows easy routing of utilities and gives the skunks somewhere to live...
We just had a 40' container moved in - before it arrived I built two 9' x 1' boxes with 2 x 6 boards, dug out about a 3" strip in the ground and then used the boards as frames, spaced EXACTLY 40' apart. I also bought 6 10' 3/8" rebars and cut 'em down to 8'. Borrowed a friend's cement mixer and put 12 60# bags of QuickCrete in each frame, did 6 bags, then put the rebars in, then did the remaining 6 bags. Let it cure for about 2 weeks and pulled the boards. Not EXACTLY level on top and level between 'em only to about 1/8", but "good enough".
Container Lifters NW did the "lift" from our old place (after we filled the container with the contents of a 3 BR house ) to our new farm, and he dropped it right on both ends - they settled about 2" (no worse than railroad ties); but it's stable now. Next step is to get it cleaned up and painted before the neighbors complain about the "K-LINE" on the side.
If I can figure out how to get the video off my iPhone, I'll post a video of the delivery. Container Lift NW (out of Portland) did a GREAT job of lifting the container FLAT, and dropping it the same; NOTHING inside shifted - including even a stepladder we mistakenly left in the back. The whole thing, INCLUDING the cost of the container, 4 "professional" packer/loaders AND the "lift" cost less than 25% of the bid we got from a "real" mover AND will be paid for after 12 months of not having to pay "rent" for an 8x10 "storage locker".
This is how you move them. I see no reason that you couldn't use a manly floor jack to lift one end of the container. Heck, my cheap finger smashing 2-ton floor jack should have the power to lift one end. The 6-ton big dog will do better.
Yanmar EF685 with 4in1 loader, Yanmar YM2700 with 4in1 loader, Fiat AT7C Dozer
Nice and easy and free foundation is to use old truck tyres, your local tyre shop will give them to you for nothing and happy to get rid of them. Use 4, one under each corner for a 20' and 6 for a 40'. they work well the container will find it's own level as it sinks into the tyre and holds it up for good air flow under it. Maintance free, easy to move, they won't break and don't seem to sink into the ground under the weight. I have two 40' and one 20' done this way now for a few years with no problem.