• Thank you for visiting HeavyEquipmentForums.com! Our objective is to provide industry professionals a place to gather to exchange questions, answers and ideas. We welcome you to register using the "Register" icon at the top of the page. We'd appreciate any help you can offer in spreading the word of our new site. The more members that join, the bigger resource for all to enjoy. Thank you!

Crane Brands - Bridge Work

fensoncont.

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2007
Messages
286
Location
Midwest
Hey guys,

I wanted to contribute to the new section with a topic I could get educated off of. Well, let's see some opinions from guys on the board, who builds the best cranes? On bridge projects do you see All Terrain Cranes, Rough Terrain Cranes, or Crawler Cranes?
 

Dozerboy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 18, 2006
Messages
2,232
Location
TX
Occupation
Operator
We only use crawlers (bridge work) we have Manitowoc's and American's. Out of the guys I've asked none of them had a preference.
 

Bluwenis

Member
Joined
Jan 22, 2008
Messages
24
Location
Seattle
I think Grove wins for a juice crane, as for AT, RT. Grove has a nice 60T, 90T and 130T RT. If you need more than that you have to go to a GMK up to 550T, which are very large. Dozerboy is right. You seen a lot of 4100 and 888 Manitowac, and American HC80 And HC110 on bridge projects. Manitowac does own Grove along with many others. And Terex owns American along with Demag now. There are also many excellent less know options from Japan and other parts of Asia, mostly hydralic lattice. Seems gone is the day of a new shiny friction rig. I hear Manitowac will make a new 4100 if you ask nicely. Hope that helps.
 

JDMGrading

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 26, 2007
Messages
188
Location
Charlotte
All 16 of our cranes are Link-Belt that includes truck cranes and crawlers. We hav'nt done a bridge in a while now we've been trying to convert over to steel and precast and a lot of tiltwall jobs for our 348 Hylab.
 

Dualie

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 23, 2007
Messages
1,371
Location
Nor Cal
Anything by the manitowoc crane group! I wont own anything but national boom trucks PERIOD. I have operated Terex, Elliot, Tadano, Giuffre bro's, Altec and several other boom trucks and national is where I keep my money!

I'm currently playing lets make a deal on a new national 900H or possibly a 1300H.

The link belt all terrains are a pretty decent unit.

OH and them Germans Liebherr know a thing or two about a thing or two.

I leased a potain HDT 80 self erecting tower for 3 months and that was a damn impressive versatile unit. If I had the work for one year round I wouldn't hesitate to drop the hammer on purchasing one
 

bear

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 22, 2008
Messages
541
Location
South Central Kentucky
Occupation
Math, Physics, keeping out of trouble and doing od
Most of the stuff we used were linkbelt or manitowoc crawlers mostly. occasionally we'd use rubber tired terex cranes for mobility and light type work. Never had a real preference as long as it was in good shape and everything checked out good.
 

Andy

New Member
Joined
Apr 3, 2008
Messages
2
Location
China
Occupation
Tower crane sales
Hello ,everyone. I am Andy from China. I am very glad coming here to know more friends.
 

piledriving

Member
Joined
Sep 17, 2008
Messages
8
Location
Norfolk, Va
Occupation
Piledriver, operator, carpenter
The company I worked for before had 4 Terex HC80's, 1 HC110, Link-Belt 218,518 and 30 ton RT and a 75 ton truck crane, 2 American 5299's, one 597 and a old whirley rig. the company I work for know has American 9310, Link-Belt 218 and a 248, Terex HC80 and a couple of smaller cranes in the yard (Dont know the make or numbers on them).

Justin
 

Lugghead

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 14, 2009
Messages
72
Location
USA
I've been working for a bridge company running a Terex 555 RT. Which is a 55t RT. There is a twin to my rig and then a BUNCH of 3900 crawler rigs, a couple of 2900 truck rigs and a 222, all Manitowocs.
 

insleyboy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 24, 2008
Messages
191
Location
Monroe Michigan
Occupation
Operator 25 years, was laborer for 7 years
Where I worked we used smaller Terex and Grove rigs. The Inner-city bridge work left you very little room to boom up in many cases. Setting barrier wall under decks or on a deck for demo or traffic shifts left you little wiggle room most of the time. We would use a 35 ton Terex or a 2900 Manitowoc if piling was involved, or in an area you could actually strech out so to speak.
 

chero76

New Member
Joined
Nov 1, 2009
Messages
3
Location
Ar
Occupation
Construction
linkbelt

Willing to sell any? I'm looking for 60 tonns and above.
 

Crane Op

Member
Joined
Oct 23, 2008
Messages
12
Location
Cali
Occupation
Crane Operator
At the San Francisco - Oakland Bay Bridge project.. The cranes are..

1 Manitowoc 2250 (Bragg Crane)

1 Manitowoc M250 W/luffing Jib (Sheedy Crane)

1 Manitowoc 888 W/ Luffing Jib (Sheedy Crane)

2 Manitowoc 4100 Ringers (MCM Contracting, I believe)

and 1 Liebherr LR-1280 (Bragg Crane).

I see a lot of Manitowocs and older Link belts on bridge jobs around the SF bay area
 

stretch

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2008
Messages
784
Location
Southington, CT
Occupation
gopher
Manitowoc and Link-Belt win the popularity contest around here for crawlers and truck-mounted units. B-E is still popular for pile-driving work. Occasionally an American, Kobelco, Lima, or Liebherr unit will pop up. RT cranes are between the Terex brands (Terex, American, Lorain) and Grove, and a few L-B's.
 

chero76

New Member
Joined
Nov 1, 2009
Messages
3
Location
Ar
Occupation
Construction
Thanks Crane Op, i'll follow up on these cranes t'mmrw.if you see any bucyrus 38b up to 88b's Please let me know.
 

robert3pl

New Member
Joined
May 19, 2014
Messages
1
Location
Los Angeles, CA
Occupation
3pl consultant for warehousing and transportation
Pretty helpful info in here. I'm currently overseeing our consulting department for our order warehousing and pick in pack services, and am seeing cost-effectiveness on the life span on some of these names you've mentioned. Manitowoc has always been a favorite here at Third Party Logistics Company and for our smaller 3pl services up to our big pick n pack accounts, we want to ensure we are using the best equipment that is built to last. This is will help me present some interesting facts to the team, so thanks for your insight all. If you have any questions about 3pl warehousing, don't hesitate to ask.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

willie59

Administrator
Joined
Dec 21, 2008
Messages
13,396
Location
Knoxville TN
Occupation
Service Manager
Third Party Logistics Company

I see you're new here, welcome. But just to let you know, we're not real keen on hyperlinks here, looks spammy from our perspective. And if it shows up again...it will be considered spam.
 

rosebyrne

Member
Joined
Mar 26, 2014
Messages
8
Location
India
K2Cranes today is geared up to meet the challenges of change, in a constantly changing market,to meet the critical demands of material handling solutions.K2 Cranes- Manufacturers and top crane supplier of EOT Cranes,Gantry Cranes,Jib Cranes, Material Handling Equipment's, Over Head Travelling Cranes and so on.
 

dbl612

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 6, 2012
Messages
111
Location
torrington, ct.
Occupation
crane operator
there is a reason you pay more for a national. quality, durability, and parts availability.
 
Top