OPINION BY
¶ 1 Appellants, Jason and Holly Wood, appeal from the order dated May 3, 2001, granting a Petition to Transfer Venue filed by Appellee E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company (“DuPont”). The order transferred venue from Philadelphia County to Bradford County. We affirm.
*709 ¶ 2 The background of the case is as follows. On December 16, 1999, Appellants filed a personal injury action against DuPont in Philadelphia County. Appellants alleged that on January 8, 1998, Jason Wood (“Wood”) suffered injuries after he tripped and fell in a hole while making a delivery at DuPont’s plant in Towanda, Bradford County. Appellants provided no further details about the nature of the accident.
¶ 3 Appellants are residents of the state of Delaware. DuPont is a Delaware corporation with a registered agent for service of process in Philadelphia and a research facility (unrelated to the Towanda plant) in Philadelphia. Bradford County is located in northeast Pennsylvania, on the New York border.
¶4 On February 3, 2000, shortly after the parties filed their pleadings, DuPont filed its first petition to transfer venue to Bradford County. No discovery had taken place at this time. On March 17, 2000, the trial court denied this petition. The parties then engaged in discovery, which closed on February 5, 2001. Trial was expected to commence in July 2001.
¶5 On March 5, 2001, DuPont filed a renewed petition for change of venue to Bradford County. In support of this petition, DuPont presented additional evidence that DuPont had not presented in support of its original petition. On April 27, 2001, the trial court heard oral argument on the renewed petition. On May 3, 2001, the trial court granted DuPont’s renewed petition and transferred the action to Bradford County. This appeal followed. 1
¶ 6 Appellants raise three issues on appeal:
1) Did the trial court err in considering [DuPont’s] renewed petition to transfer because it was untimely and there was no new evidence or case law since the filing of defendant’s original petition?
2) Did the trial court err in transferring this case from Philadelphia to Bradford County based on all of the circumstances in this matter, including whether [DuPont] offered sufficiently detailed information on the record to satisfy its heavy burden that trial in Philadelphia would be oppressive or vexatious?
3) Did the trial court err in failing to give appropriate consideration to the hardship and prejudice to the plaintiffs, the medical providers and the independent witnesses in transferring this action?
Appellants’ Brief at 4.
¶7 Our standard of review is as follows. “It is well established that a trial court’s decision to transfer venue will not be disturbed absent an abuse of discretion.”
Jackson v. Laidlaw Transit, Inc.,
822 A.2d
56, 57
(Pa.Super.2003). An abuse of discretion takes place when the trial judge overrides or misapplies the law, or exercises judgment in a manifestly unreasonable manner, or renders a decision based on partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill
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will.
Cooper v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company,
¶ 8 First, Appellants argue that the trial court should not have entertained DuPont’s second petition because it was untimely. Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1006(d)(1) governs petitions to transfer venue based on forum non con-veniens. This rule reads as follows:
For the convenience of parties and witnesses the court upon petition of any party may transfer an action to the appropriate court of any other county where the action could originally have been brought.
Pa.R.C.P. 1006(d)(1).
¶ 9 “Rule 1006(d) imposes no time limit upon a party who seeks to transfer venue[.]”
Vogel v. National Railroad Passenger Carp.,
370 Pa.Super, 315,
¶ 10 Even assuming
arguendo
that the timeliness of the petition is a relevant factor,
2
Appellants have not demonstrated an abuse of discretion under the facts of this case. In
Borger v. Murphy,
¶ 11 Next, Appellants argue that the trial court should not have entertained the second petition because “there was no change in the facts or case law from the time the original petition was filed in March 2000.” Appellants’ Brief at 13. This argument is based on the premise that a single trial judge must wait for a significant change in the law or the facts before reconsidering his or her own rulings.
¶ 12 This premise is unsound. “A court has the inherent power to reconsider
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its own rulings.”
Joseph F. Cappelli & Sons, Inc. v. Keystone Custom Homes, Inc.,
¶ 13 We further note that Appellants’ citation to
Turner v. Kohl,
¶ 14 The instant case is distinguishable from Turner and from other cases applying the coordinate jurisdiction rule. In the instant case, a single trial judge reconsidered his own ruling on transferring venue. Thus, this case is governed by the general rule that a single trial judge has the inherent power to reconsider his or her own rulings. Cappelli, supra. Finally, Appellants have failed to cite any circumstances in the instant case which would bar application of this general rule. Appellants’ second claim fails. 3
¶ 15 Next, Appellants argue that the trial court abused its discretion by granting the petition, because DuPont failed to meet its burden of demonstrating that Philadelphia County is an oppressive or vexatious forum.
¶ 16 The seminal case regarding transfers based on forum
non conveniens
is
Cheeseman, supra.
Our Supreme Court reasoned as follows. First, “a trial court, even if congested, must give deference to the plaintiff’s choice of forum[.]”
Cheese-man,
¶ 17 The Cheeseman Court stressed that “the defendant must show more than the chosen forum is merely inconvenient to him.” Id. A mere showing “that no significant aspect of the ease involves the chosen forum, and that litigating in another forum would be more convenient,” is insufficient. Id. Finally, the trial court’s own congestion or backlog is not a relevant factor. Id.
¶ 18 We now turn to the trial court’s determination that transfer was appropriate. Initially, we note that the trial court invoked the proper legal standards for transfer based on forum non conveniens. Trial Court Opinion, 6/22/2001, at 2-3. The trial court then reasoned as follows:
In the present case, [Appellants] chose to bring suit in Philadelphia County; however, this action could have been brought in Bradford County, where the cause of action arose. Therefore, an alternative forum was, and is still, available to [Appellants].
The hotly disputed issue in this case is whether a hole existed at [DuPont’s] plant on the day of [Wood’s] fall. [DuPont] will attempt to prove that such a hole never existed prior to, or at the time of, [Wood’s] alleged fall in the shipping lot on January 8,1998. As a result, [DuPont] plans to call expert witness, Malcolm Lim, who conducted a ground-penetrating radar test of the pavement.
[DuPont] has also shown with detailed information on the record they plan to call the following plant employees: John Flanagan, to testify there were no problems with the 1997 paving job, and that the shipping area has not been repaved since 1997; John Keegan, to testify that no construction permits have been issued for repaving or any other type of repair since the alleged accident; George Watson, to testify that no such work has been done in the relevant area since the time of the alleged accident; Mike Walsh, to show there were no drains or similar holes in the relevant area that had been removed or covered since the alleged accident; Edwin Robertson, to explain the purpose of monitoring wells in the shipping yard and testify that none existed at the time of the alleged accident; Vance Seely, to testify that none of the bimonthly safety audits performed in the shipping area around the time of the alleged accident mention the existence of any hole in the lot; [and] Walter Beebe, to testify that none of the truck drivers who performed their duties in the shipping area lot ever complained about the alleged hole. These specified witnesses, essential to [DuPont’s] case, are located about 190 miles from Philadelphia County. However, if the trial were to be held in Bradford County, these witnesses would be less than 2 miles away from the Bradford County Courthouse.
[DuPont] plans to call employees of the IA Construction Corporation who performed the paving job at the shipping site within Dupont’s Towanda *713 plant, prior to the alleged accident. Du-pont is prepared to call three of IA Construction foremen, that worked on the job to testify that IA Construction left no holes unpaved in the relevant area. DuPont also plans to call IA Construction President, Terry Brofee, to authenticate documents that establish the paving job was completely finished by October 3, 1997, and to testify that no one from IA Construction ever returned to Dupont’s Towanda plant after that date to remedy any problems with the job. IA Construction is located in Mun-cy, Pennsylvania within Lycoming County, a neighboring county of Bradford County. As a result, the witnesses from IA Construction would be required to travel over 173 miles if this case were to be tried in Philadelphia County. Since DuPont has specified their key -witnesses and also their potential testimony regarding the condition of the pavement and the alleged hole after the first denial for change of venue, it is now clearly shown on the record that Bradford County would provide easier access to these witnesses.
[DuPont] has established, pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 206, it is necessary for the jury to view the pavement where the alleged fall took place in order to determine if a hole existed, was repaired or paved over at any time prior to, or after the alleged accident. The defense intends to show the alleged location of the hole had been paved just months prior to the accident and that such a hole never existed on the day of [Wood’s] accident. [DuPont] maintains that this determination can, and should, be made by the jury to determine negligence, the basis of this suit. Compared to the Johns case 4 , busing the present jury 190 miles, from Philadelphia County to Bradford County, to view the accident scene would place an unnecessary burden on the jury and unneeded cost on the court. Therefore, under Cheese-man, Bradford County would provide easier access to conduct a view of [the] premises involved in the dispute.
Trial Court Opinion, 6/22/01, at 3-6 (citations omitted).
¶ 19 The trial court concluded that:
A trial in Bradford County would better serve the interests of justice since it provides easier access to witnesses and also an ability for the jury to view the characteristics of the shipping lot pavement, where the alleged fall took place. Allowing this trial to proceed in Philadelphia County would be not only oppressive to [DuPont], but the monetary expenses possibly incurred, either for travel and/or lodging and meals to Philadelphia County, as compared to Bradford County, do not justify the trial of this case in Philadelphia County.
Id. at 6-7.
¶ 20 We see no abuse of discretion. DuPont placed detailed information on the record establishing that many of its critical witnesses were plant employees who would be forced to travel over 190 miles to attend trial in Philadelphia. Other critical defense witnesses include employees and/or officers of the paving company that was responsible for paving the relevant area after the accident. Trial in Bradford County would provide far greater access to these witnesses, who would otherwise have to travel over 170 miles to attend trial in Philadelphia County. Moreover, the instant case was particularly appropriate for a jury view, in fight of factual disputes surrounding the condition of the pavement on the date in question. Further, we see
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no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s determination that these factors establish oppressiveness and vexatiousness, and not merely inconvenience.
See, Borger,
¶ 21 Appellants’ arguments to the contrary are unavailing. First, Appellants argue that DuPont failed to meet its burden because it did not present any affidavits from its proposed witnesses detailing the hardship they would suffer by traveling to Philadelphia. It is true that DuPont presented only one affidavit, and it is unclear whether the trial court considered it.
5
On the other hand,
Cheeseman
and Rule 1006(d) do not require any particular form of proof. All that is required is that the moving party present a sufficient factual basis for the petition.
Cheeseman,
¶22 Second, Appellants argue that a viewing of the premises is unwarranted because the condition of the premises has changed from the time of the accident to the present day. In his deposition, Wood stated that on January 8, 1998, he fell in a hole in the pavement of the Towanda plant’s shipping and receiving area. Wood further testified that when he revisited the facility on August 24, 2000, the hole no longer existed. Wood Deposition, 9/25/2000, at 55, 60-61. In other words, Appellants’ position is that the hole was covered up after the accident. DuPont has taken the position that the shipping area was paved in 1997, before Wood’s fall. Thus, it is not entirely clear that the condition of the premises has changed.
¶ 23 In any event, the trial court holds the discretion to order a jury view.
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Pa.R.C.P. 219;
Lobozzo v. Adam Eidemiller, Inc.,
¶24 Finally, Appellants argue that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to grant the proper deference to Appellants’ chosen forum. Specifically, Appellants argue that the court failed to consider that Wood is permanently disabled, and that travel to Bradford County would be more inconvenient than travel to Philadelphia County. Appellants also note that Wood’s treating medical witnesses and several independent fact witnesses reside in the Philadelphia vicinity. 7 Appellants further argue that the court must expressly compare the convenience of their chosen forum with the hardship suffered by the defendants.
¶ 25 We disagree that an explicit balancing analysis is required. It is true that under
Cheeseman,
the plaintiffs choice of forran is entitled to great weight.
Cheeseman,
¶ 26 Order affirmed.
Notes
. An order transferring venue is an interlocutory order, appealable as of right. Pa.R.A.P. 311(c);
Jackson v. Laidlaw Transit, Inc.,
Appellants complied with the trial court’s order to file a timely Concise Statement of Matters Complained of on Appeal under Pa. R.A.P. 1925. The trial court issued a Rule 1925 opinion on June 22, 2001.
In an unpublished Memorandum filed on July 1, 2002, a 2-1 panel majority of this Court affirmed the trial court’s order. This Court subsequently granted Appellants’ petition for en banc review and withdrew the panel’s decision.
.
See, Turner v. Kohl,
. Assuming that significant additional facts were required, we would conclude that this test was met. DuPont filed its first petition less than two months after Appellants filed their complaint, and before any discovery had been conducted. At the time, DuPont knew very little about the nature of the accident, aside from the fact that Wood allegedly fell somewhere on the premises of the Towanda plant. After taking discovery, DuPont learned that: (1) Wood fell in the shipping/receiving area of the plant; and (2) the hole in which he fell no longer existed. During discovery, DuPont developed evidence that the particular area in question had been paved before Wood fell. Thus, according to DuPont, the actions or inactions of the paving company became a relevant factor. At that point, DuPont could specifically identify not only the responsible parties at the paving company, but also the relevant employees and managers at the Towanda plant. Moreover, as noted further infra, the additional discovery highlighted the need for a site visit to the plant.
We also note that adopting the rule urged by Appellants would unfairly penalize parties who seek to file a transfer petition relatively early in the litigation. Such a choice to file an early petition is understandable, given the very nature of the underlying claim: namely, that the chosen forum is oppressive and vexatious to the petitioner. Of course, petitioners who file too early run the risk of having their initial petition denied for failure to present detailed information on the record.
.
Johns v. First Union Corp.,
. At oral argument on the renewed petition, DuPont presented an affidavit from James Sanders, the plant manager at the Bradford County facility. The affidavit indicated that the Towanda plant is staffed on a "one job-one person” basis, with no back-up employees. Additionally, several of the necessary witnesses work the same shift in the same area. The affidavit stated that the ability to ship products would be affected and production and safety at the plant would be jeopardized if the witnesses were to testify at trial in Philadelphia. See, April 26, 2001 Affidavit of James Sanders. Appellants objected that the affidavit was untimely and conclusory. Appellants also argued that they did not have an opportunity to depose Mr. Sanders regarding the contents of the affidavit. The trial court’s opinion in support of the transfer order does not make reference to the Sanders affidavit. Accordingly, we will presume that the court did not consider the Sanders affidavit.
. Appellants cite a number of cases for the proposition that affidavits from the affected witnesses are required. Appellants’ Brief at 17-18,
citing Cooper v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
. DuPont has offered to waive any challenge to Wood’s medical expenses, current medical condition, and future earning capacity if the case is transferred to Bradford County. Presumably, this offer would render moot the testimony of many (if not all) of Wood’s treating physicians. Appellants respond that this offer is a disingenuous tactic to help bolster its transfer petition. We need not consider these matters.
. Our courts have not hesitated to find an abuse of discretion if the defendant established mere inconvenience, rather than oppressiveness.
See, e.g., Johns,
. We note that in many cases, the location and convenience of the plaintiff’s witnesses will be immaterial to the central question of whether the forum is oppressive to the defendant.
