neci
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A sixteenth used to seem small. Now days, a tenth is small.
A tenth of a thousandth.
This job is twisting my brain.
Got any pics of the job?
Well I mean small for me. A couple months ago I was on tagline setting 80,000 lb bridge headers and driving one inch drift pins with a penumatic rivet buster.
Now I'm going tap tap"fuck, too far!" tap tap "Damnit, too far the other way now!"
But you're dealing with single atoms. That's a whole nother world of tight tolderances.
It's steel to hold some fancy floor to ceiling glass in a corporate HQ. Not all that exciting to look at but for some reason they want it perfect, like the glass guy never heard of shims. I think it might just be alcoholism. I'll try to take some pix though.
Oops. Sorry about that— a slight miscalculation.
http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2011/09/07/HPcrane.jpg?t=1315437779&s=51
A 500 ton self erecting, truck-mounted crane
wow...
that's awesome!
Oops. Sorry about that— a slight miscalculation.
http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2011/09/07/HPcrane.jpg?t=1315437779&s=51
A 500 ton self erecting, truck-mounted crane
that's obvious.
they'll use a crane!
Oops. Sorry about that— a slight miscalculation.
http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2011/09/07/HPcrane.jpg?t=1315437779&s=51
A 500 ton self erecting, truck-mounted crane
Let's hope so!My first thought was great photoshop work!
I guess they have to hook onto the chassis with one rig to h old it up and use another one to take the boom apart in sections.
Pretty embarrassing for the operator, if he got out ok that is.
http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2011/09/07/HPcrane.jpg?t=1315437779&s=51
A 500 ton self erecting, truck-mounted crane
My first thought was great photoshop work!
I guess they have to hook onto the chassis with one rig to hold it up and use another one to take the boom apart in sections.
Pretty embarrassing for the operator, if he got out ok that is.
I agree with you; it is the goddamndest thing I ever saw in my life. I wouldn't have believed that photograph if it hadn't been attached to a wire service story. The crane was being used at D.C.'s National Cathedral to inspect and repair damage from the earthquake. The operator was hospitalized but the only real injury was mortification. Scale for the crane's size is provided by the green mobile crane that's adjacent. It is a mind-boggling image.
I wonder what happened...freak wind gust at high boom?
Now I'm trying to think how to get it down in one piece. The counterweights are on the bottom, so that's good. Those things have monster frame rails, but how to hook on to it? Hope someone YouTubes the process.