I don't know how complete this will be with so many different methods, this has worked for me.
Step 1
One starts with removing the capped honey from the hive, if the majority of the comb in a super is capped it is usually dried enough to extract. The popular method when in doubt is the shake test where one hold the frame with uncapped honey horizontal (sans bees) and gives it one or two rapid shakes and sees if nectar shakes out. If not or just a couple of drops it is ok. One can always purchase a honey refractometer to test it also.
Now you have to get the bees off of the honey frames, I used two methods this year because my back was out and it killed me just toting a five frame of honey comb. A healthy strong person can remove and load the entire super after getting the bees out of it. One can use a porter bee escape which requires two trips a day apart, or use a fume board to drive the bees down, blow them out with a leaf blower or remove one frame at by shaking and or brushing. Having no personal experience with a porter bee escape, I will leave them to another.
I used a gas powered leaf blower one year due to the number of supers and wanted to try it. Put a piece of plywood on the ground, set the super on end and blew from the bottom up. It was not real efficient and had ten million bees in the air and some damaged and dead ones on the ground. Difficult to lift, set in my truck and get covered without a lot of bees getting back in them.
A fume board works well, usually similar to a telescopic cover that sets on top the super instead of over it. You do not want the felt or cloth material inside it to touch the tops of your frames and stink them up from the Honey Bandit, Robber or whatever you purchase to squeeze onto the material. Remove the hive cover, apply an even amount onto the cloth spreading it as you apply kind of like writing on a cake. Give it about five minutes and most have moved down into the supers and they can be removed or the individual frames removed as I did and transported to another box that is kept covered by a towel or similar, Do not forget the bottom of the holding box, must be sealed also to keep the bees out.
Another method that is free is removing the cover, smoking them, lifting one frame at a time, giving them a good shake back into the hive, taking a bee brush or in my case a turkey feather (they roost next to my hives), brush whats left off, put it in a covered transport box.
Next step is take them to where ever you are going to extract them.