Your thinking to much in the 21st century.
With a pair of levers, a bit of blocking in 1", 2", 4" and 6", 6-8 2"x4' heavy pipe, and 4 8' 2x4s you can move most anything. A heavy rope is helpfull. A winch or comealong and a hydraulic jack help in certain situations as well.
Lift the edge up of the machine with the levers and start working even around it slipping in blocks until you can get some 6" wood runners under it. Lag the machine down to the runners. set 2 2x4's down in front of the machine in the direction you want to take it. lift the runners up and slip the pipes between the runners and the 2x4 track. Slowly push/pry the machine forward, as one pipe comes out the back take it to the front. use the levers, dont strain yourself. As you reach the end of the track you can put down the other 2x4 overlapping/slightly offset the the inside/outside. This works across gravel, grass or concrete. Don't try the pipes directly on concrete as the tinniest pebble can stop every thing, use the 2x4.
A low car trailer can be used to haul, some have decent ramps or use blocking and 4x4s as ramps. Tie the heavy rope to the front of the trailer and go around the machine with a truckers knot. As the levers are used to pry the runners up the ramps have some one purchase(taking in) the rope through the truckers knot. A come along or pair of them(or even a block and tackle can be used. Remember if the load is tall and top heavy to pull from the middle or 3/4's way up, not the runners so it doesn't go over backwards. Tie down the load well to the trailer, many machines are top heavy so tie up top not down low.
I have move several machines this way, yes it takes an hour or two, especially the first time, but it cost virtually nothing, the wood blocking is scrap, the pipes can be scrap, Even one of my pry bars is an old disc axle. A winch on the front of the jeep can be a help but remember to take it very slow the first time you do something like this.