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As a scrapyard crane operator for 20 years, operating the cranes nobody wanted, this video was sickening! Everything new! Never had a computer, air conditioning, new parts,(except for filters, oil, some nuts, bolts and washers). Parts were scavenged from other cranes. Cables (up to 7/8”) were cut with a manual cutter. Even the tools came from the scrap pile. One crane I had to start was with a hand crank. Am jealous!
The guy that made this video, "I know it's not a tower crane.....but I'm gonna say it is to make people lose their minds." Sits back and watches his views climb....lol
I've had the pleasure of running a LR13000 3 times and what an AMAZING piece of machinery it was! Hand down the best among crawler cranes. Way better than the CC8800 that's for sure!
The most advanced techniques in the world are increasingly an innovation, thanks to which great projects are born, people live in luxurious environments.
Какая слаженная работа-так красиво показывают-до миллиметров-супер-то только чтобы садились на эти краны профи-вот это да-а то неделю кран собирали или месяц-начали мост возводить-поднимают пролет-и-не рассчитывая вылет чреды и грузоподъёмность-крушение вместе с краном-обидно-а рабочие собирают красиво
I kinda hate to be ‘that’ guy but I’m only tryin to help. That’s not a ‘tower’ crane, it’s a ‘crawler’ crane, the difference is huge or I wouldn’t say anything. ……’and knowing’s half the battle!’ 👍🤓
And the white dudes put their life's in their hands: need to send this video to all the race baiiters out there!! This is what real equality looks like!! Just a bunch of guys getting it done!!.
Faith can moved mountains, they have Faith in what they do, they do and it has been done the almost impossible thing. What a great achievement of human being?!!! For the planners, financers, owner and everyone who got participated in that task, congratulations to all of you!!!
How many years does it take to make a crew like the ones shown here? They each have a precise way of controlling every move they make. They themselves operate like a machine, each doing his important part. Great video. Love the soundtrack as well!
If you can put Lego together you can build anything. Its Basic work. Any knucklehead can do it. The bigger machine the easier. Komatsu PC8000 (800 ton) is a small digger and a good place to start before working your way up to a big drag line.
نحن دول داخلية وكلف النقل للمعدات الثقيلة خالي جدا لهذا في المستقبل نركز تصنيع او تجميع داخل البلد يوفر لن المال ونحن دول بحاجة ماسة للبناء اي شي نحتاج بناء من جديد لاننا ليس لدين بنية تحتي كافية
In the lne of work that i do in safety I have had the privelage of working around some of the biggest cranes in the world, an it never stops to surprizes me on the power of these cranes, and the men that operate them in so many critacail lifts , and all it takes is one little mistake to make it a bad day, and i seen them take someones life, just in the assembling one.
Its our nature, to build, used and when it comes to a point that it has no more value to us, sometimes we take it for granted and worst, we destroy it. "Your comment took my attention. great opinion also!!!"
It is funny how a huge, powerful piece of utilitarian equipment, like the tower crane, can also be a work of art, or at least it is to me. Beautiful machine.
As being a retired heavy duty diesel mechanic in the international mining industry on the first part of this video the excavator the mechanics where pounding the pins in with a 20lbs sledgehammer hammer if I was on that job , I would go totally ballistic, you do not beat in pins with a sledgehammer, never. Also a lot of those pin caps and other assembly points they should have alignment pins made out of bolts with the head of the bolts cut off to be used wherever they can. In ending you never ever beat on a hardened/ polished pin with a sledgehammer, you use dead blow hammers.
Are you referring to 2:12 in the video? If so I would not call that pounding. What he did is very common considering the application. No harm done whatsoever unless you care to explain otherwise?
@@GripFreak I will explain, I don’t and I worked for Atlas Copco as a diesel mechanic on underground mining equipment and we never ever beat on a pin with a sledgehammer we used dead- blow hammers. Simple a customer buys a million dollar machine and sees the end of the pins all beat up, WTF , if all the bores are machined correctly and everything is machined and aligned correctly the pin should go right in with little effort. I would of got fired if I was caught beating on a pin with a sledgehammer.
@@mikethomas9544 I retired at 53. But I’ve watched dudes beat the hell out of pins then f-up their shoulders and have go out on a workman’s comp Disabiility. Also I worked for Atlas Copco mining and construction division and if we ever got caught beating a pin like that we’d be fired most likely on the spot. As I’ve said before a customer buys a million dollar machine they don’t want to see pins with a hole lot of beat marks on them and I agree.
@@MrMopar413 I agree 100% with you Joel. I only drive truck (tractor trailer) for a living but even it that line of work......if you have to beat on something then you are doing it wrong. Slow and easy always gets you the best results in the quickest time.
@@mikethomas9544 No I retired at 58. But I’ve had Co-workers go out on disability with their right shoulder socket going bad because of pin- misalignment etc.
Of course this film looks to be about 40 years old, but I love the comparison of these guys, to a film of a SARENS or a MAMMOET crew putting together some equipment, these O&K guys all look like a bunch of good ol boys having a kegger while they are putting this together with some dirty hammers and a big wrench, and the MAMMOET crews look like they are a NASA team working in clean suits.
I watched the entire video, waiting to see the "world's largest tower crane", and all I saw was a crawler crane! Did you forget to upload the part with the tower crane?
This was an interesting video, with the crane operator, the, signals, the positioning of the components, the installing of the pins, etc. I can't believe they left the part in the video, at the 6:16 mark, plus a few seconds, of the dude beating the hell out of that large pin end cap, with a bare, unpadded, 10 pound sledge hammer. Not a cool production, at that point.
@@joewoodchuck3824 The crawler could be a week or more. For the excavator, they are typically broken down into the major subassemblies to be moved to different mines. Then there is the time for scrapping them after 20-30 years because they are too used up to be rebuilt.