
Warren Kumari wrote: http://homepage.mac.com/warrenkumari/BFR/BFR2.JPG
In fact, the reason the box which otherwise appears to contain a lot of air is so big is because they have to pack the Incredible Hulk (in its pre-Hulk stage) inside. If you order the Hulk option, as soon as you unpack the crate, the Hulk jumps out of the box and carries the BFR to the right bay. The logo on the board it a warning not shake the crate too much otherwise the Hulk will rip the box apart trying to get out early. So remember, when the raised floor collapses because it could not stand the combined weight of the forklift, the crate, the 12016 and the bozo that drives the forklift, it's because of the Hulk pictured on the link above.

Subject: RE: Cisco HFR Date: Thu, May 27, 2004 at 10:27:17AM +0100 Quoting Neil J. McRae (neil@DOMINO.ORG):
Are you strong? Last time I took delivery of a GSR personally - the guy I was most happy to see what the guy in the forklift. Be kind to forklift drivers - they are your friends.
We install 12016 chassises (is that the correct plural? :-) between two people. One holds the chassis in place, one runs the battery screwdriver. The raising platform does help, of course. Actually, the 12016 is by far the easiest GSR to install, since it almost always is floorstanding or atmost some 3½ HE from the floor. /Måns, 1 12416, 3 12016, 1 12404 in the pop. -- Måns Nilsson Systems Specialist +46 70 681 7204 KTHNOC MN1334-RIPE Thank god!! ... It's HENNY YOUNGMAN!!
participants (3)
-
Mans Nilsson
-
Michel Py
-
Neil J. McRae