So today was a big day. Semi with crates had some issues getting here, but once it arrived the local wrecker guys got the crates out of the semi and onto their rollback and in a few minutes had them dropped in front of my garage door. Had three large crates. One with chassis and seats, wheel arches(wings) nosecone and other assorted items in the cockpit of the car. Crate two was largest and had wheels, transmission, diff and many boxes of parts. Third crate was engine. Based on advice from Josh we had a couple of drills fully charged to break down crates. One slight frustration was that some of crates had screws, some had roofing nails and some had a mix. So it was impact driver for a bit, then crowbar for a bit and on and on.
We used an engine hoist strapped to front cross mounts and two people handling the back end to get the chassis in the garage and placed on jack stands. We unloaded the pallet of wheels, parts etc. and placed items on racks we had prepared for this. We took the top and sides off the engine crate which gave us easy access to the lift points on the engine. Kept the base to place the engine on for the time being, lifted the engine with the engine hoist and moved it to a safe place.
We are missing our roll cage, but hey from what I read it wouldn't be a Caterham build unless you are missing some big pieces.
Hardest part of the entire process was breaking down the crates and getting them to a size small enough to go in our commercial size dumpsters. We ended up at the end of the day with a circular saw just cutting everything into bite size pieces.
Entire process with two people (and a third for a half hour to the get the chassis in the garage) took six hours with a few breaks to talk to people who saw the delivery and came over to talk cars.
Kudos to Josh for some good prep advice. I am posting a few pictures of the delivery and unload process. Once I do a bit of inventory of the parts (to see what else we are missing) and rearranging, I will shoot some photos of the garage layout.