Relocating a high-value instrument is not a "lift and hope" task. Weight distribution, brittle lacquer, narrow stair geometry, and awkward pivots turn a routine move into a risk-managed job. Most damage happens in the last meter, when people rush, and corners bite back. Specialists keep the process boring on purpose: measured routes, controlled handling, and protection that stays in place until final positioning.
Moving can feel expensive before you even pick up a box. Quotes come in fast, terms can be unclear, and it is easy to pay extra for things you did not expect. The smartest way to stay on budget is to compare the right details, not just the lowest number.