@@clementclarisseclemen3d708 yes I have done that before, we have one dude around here that is notorious for not stopping!! That shit really pisses me off when it goes all over a clean truck! As you know it ain't easy to clean concrete off once it dries up
I was on a site once and he had it fully reached pumping away with outriggers out. Then the pump started leaning over it was just about to tip over and the operator eased the boom back sending it back down. Ill never forget the look on his face.
If yo ass hole ain’t puckering you ain’t pumping-Wayne Priddy the legend if you don’t know you pump some more mud cause we done washed out more than you poured bruh!!! I would let bob in on the homage but we got personal differences lol i dated his daughter
Well I have to disagree with you, I have a friend who does this kind of work, all you do is driving to job site, these trucks are like RC cars, they have wireless remote control to control the pump and boom, this ding dong forgot to put out the stabilizers out so the truck has a small footprint on the ground surface, this was a lazy operator, ,,,,
@@wpowerwagon one mistake in set up or operation could mean death for men around truck and pump lines. First hand for me 20 years pumping concrete one mate missing an eye another dead.
At our company you can´t move the boom until each outrigger driven out completely and the pump is leveled out.You can overide it at the main cotrol box but if things happen as here, it´s operator failure .Don´t know how the insurance handle it in the US.
Carsten Alwes the driver got busy talking with superintendent of the job and spaced it. He is far from a rookie driver. This truck isn't equipped with that safety device, it's an older truck
At your company you can't? I beg to differ. At your company you can. You aren't supposed to, but you can. Unless there is a lockout of the boom until and unless the outriggers are deployed, you most assuredly CAN do it.
could be a rookie, could be he worked 90 hours that week and when you're that tired mistakes happen, in a in hurry, boss or customer puts the heat on, personal problems, not paying attention. You know what though, every single one of us is human, we all make mistakes.
I agree my buddy turned or a 36 m while cleaning up . It was late fri afteernoon , the foreman for the pour crew was in his ass to give him the bill so they could leave . Being extremely tired and even more pissed off, he stopped what he was doing ( pulling the ball back ) wrote the guy his Bill out. Pulled in the Outriggers with the boom up and she rolled over . He's a very good pump operator but s*** happens he got fired from that company and now is running pumps for another company .
KA-CHING $$$$$ Two big boy tow trucks, that had to be two to three thousand I bet! Like how softly the far tow guy let the pumper down! Master on his winches. Also bet that pumper operator took an Uber ride home, cause he wouldn't have a job after this!!
@ yes I will gladly explain. Ok so when your unloading grout or concrete into a pump truck and dont keep it above a certain level the pump sucks air causing a "blow back" effect which in turn blows the concrete or grout up and out of the hopper on the pump truck and it will cover your entire concrete truck and anything around it as well. It's not a fun time trying to then get all that concrete off your mixer especially if it's hot outside but it does happen if a pump operator continues to pump with a low hopper full of concrete
Much better the manufacturer of that equipment install an auto-sequence switch, if out rigger is retracted or not fully extend it won't activate the boom hydraulics. Same as the PTO if it's off no hydraulic function at all.
“I love these Schwing pumps. They weigh a lot more than them Putzmeisters so they’re way better at short-ri..............fuck”. I’m a mechanic for a pump company so even though I feel bad for the operators who turn their pumps into seesaws my bank account loves the overtime.
You have forgotten the support legs before you start working with the concrete pump, you must first attach the support legs, otherwise you will not have balance and fall over.
The outriggers were not even out?? Im surprused this happend but yet again, anytjing can happen in a operators life thank god no one got hurt or serious injured
Some of the new pupms have safety stops if you forget outriggers and or have to short rigger it won't let you swing past a certain point this preventing alot of these type mistakes
And when those things start to fail, they give you tons of problems. More things that can go wrong. Focus and dont forget things like this. I dont get it. How can you forget something like your outrigger? Ive forgotten lots of minor things but your OUTRIGGER?
@@lioneljosecastillo I agree with you .those things I talked about cause bad habbits with bad results .I was more just trying to point out the fact that you gotta be a rookie or drunk to not put proper outriggers out .it would be like wipeing your ass before you shit
With the few wonder if the driver of the concrete pumper had made a rookie mistake when they extended the booms without extending the outriggers when the few wonder if the cost of a tow job to flip the pumper back onto its wheels are deducted from their pay when fighting could have cases police are involved as they now face charges while being sacked from the company.
It looks like that the pump operator had foldet out the boom without using the outriggers... - has he *really* done this...?! If yes: How *stupid* must someone be...??? And then it´s also probably his *last* job in this company...