@@hectoromarmartinezsalazar8049 , Hi hector! I worked up there for 20+ years. Built steel scaffolds 100, 200, 300 feet high. BUT, in the winter the temps go down to minus 40 or minus 50 degrees below zero! The coldest I ever worked in was minus -62 below zero...12 hour shift! You'd have to join the Carpenter's union, Local 1325. Then they send you out on a job. You can join the Carpenter's union down there also. Wage is $40 bucks an hour for the first 40 hours. Any overtime (which is most days) is double-time, $80 bucks an hour. The weekends (all day) are all double-time - $80 bucks an hour. Get paid every week. Each week, my paycheck was well-over 2 grand (although a few checks were 3-4 grand for 1 week's pay) Hope this helps you a bit.
Good work. But FYI you always leave the clamps on the legs and runners. You don't want to pass them off on their own. It's safer if they are tight on a long piece. I got anxiety watching him hammer the beam clamp away on it's own. You loosen one beam clamp, slide it, tighten it, then do loosen the other one from the back to move the support with both beam clamps in place.
When taking of the setup you shouldve losen up the back side on one of the beam clamps and loosen one side holing on to the runner so when you take off the set up it comes off with both clamps.
Great Job Nestor and for those clowning on him go sit yo ass down yall look dum on here talking about another mans work instead of blessing him or showing support to our fellow Scaffold Builder !
Alexis Cantu well said. Seems as tho all the top scaffolders have come out the woodwork!!! Fucking divs half of them can talk a good job up that's about it most of them haven't a days work in them
nice vid. just want to point out that if that last guy of the balk would have fell. the harness would snap cus of the edge around the H-balk. so its kinda false safety ?
Galera bõa noite sobre a desmontagem do Andaime foi chou de bola .só que só teve um destraimento do nosso colega que estava em cima .faltou colocar a luva /amarrar o martelo /e nunça deixar um dos talabastes solto por motivo de Segurança .obrigada e desculpa se eu estiver errado
+rob godwin Generally agree with that, however, there are lanyards designed for that, so it's impossible to tell from this video if he has one of those or not. In general though, if that's a standard lanyard, you are absolutely correct. Not to mention, every time they go up, they are above their anchor points, giving them a freefall of greater than 6' and, unless those are lanyards that allow for a 12' freefall (and they do exist) while keeping under 1800 lbs MAF, then that is also unsafe....I mean, if you like your bones and internal organs.
Hi there, I'm wondering if there is any safe/easy way to deliver scaffold pipes and planks down to the ground from height after scaffold is dismantled. They are too long for our elevator so we still addicted to manpower use on staircase. Any better technics known?
Non sono in sicurezza, legati su un ponteggio che può cadere, legati con il blokof dall'alto. Poi senza guanti, ogni non si possono mischiare tubi e giunti con tubi ottagonali.
cooperation missing here ... you should not disassemble scaffolding in this way. no one is waiting for a colleague, took his plate and everyone happy ... there is no profit with time. together they should dismantle what took the most time to the last friend. for them the rules do not matter but if it's so cool to see that someone can fall even in total protection, You know that shit happens? your girl might sing then "I'll be missing You"..
That steel beam should of been mounted /welded on the ground that’s bad organisation putting Scaffolder’s life’s in danger I would of stripped from the top -down avoid getting out like that but good effort from Australia We got too many safety rules here
don't know what US standards are but those droppies comin off that diagonal I-beam are more than 300mm from the node and those beamies could be checked. And it looks like yous spurred with swivels? I can only say that, that job would be condemned in AUS. But hey like I said for all I know that could be legal in the US and if so, then good job.
Jon Ceasy Its more than likely immigrants (legal or not) from Mexico. They don't give a crap about safety on or off the job site. Usually nice people though.
i'v worked with these guys, they are only good at systems , but their egos get the better of them and they put all this effert into system , great guys and fearless but ask the to build a independant out of tube and it a laugh .
I worked scaffold erection for Safway Steel using Thyssen-Krupp technology and this video here is what we would call 1.) Careless 2.) Stuntman stupid This would never fly in any Kansas City educated union worked jobsite. for one he has on a safety harness and we don't use them.(kidding)......I am a ground guy shuffling the shit up on the elevator. Harness is another term for "false sense of safety", if you fall and are saved by harness,you have minutes to be rescued before tourniquet effect sets in and amputation is the final outcome.