willie59
Administrator
I was just thinking about this today! I had a feeling the pilot touched it to the ground then backed up to keep everything in his view. Ask them how the saw blade drive works. Is it chains or belts? Nice pics!
I was just thinking about this today! I had a feeling the pilot touched it to the ground then backed up to keep everything in his view. Ask them how the saw blade drive works. Is it chains or belts? Nice pics!
25c, let me see if I pretty much got this straight. It's a beautiful blue sky/partly cloudy day in Indiana. You got to go play around a couple of hours with an "antennae" attached to the jib of your Grove, then come home to take pics of a helicopter landing something that looks like it's from outer space in your barn yard, and then go inside and eat some of your grandma's apple pie. Damn...you got it made! :notworthy
How on Earth can the pilot see the saw while it is cutting ???
It looks to be hanging behind where he would be sitting . Does he look down between his legs through a Lexen panel in the floor or does he watch it on an LCD screen ?
I keep my work on a professional level.crane work and playing around dont mix. QUOTE]
Well, my comment was more "tongue in cheek", as in lifting an antennae fixed to the end of your jib isn't exactly a capacity lift. Just an easy day at the office for a change. :notworthy
I keep my work on a professional level.crane work and playing around dont mix. QUOTE]
Well, my comment was more "tongue in cheek", as in lifting an antennae fixed to the end of your jib isn't exactly a capacity lift. Just an easy day at the office for a change. :notworthy
I new what you ment ATCOEQUIP.Its springtime now ,It was 34 degrees this morning and it got up to 55 degrees this afternoon.Things are moving now.Monday morning I saw a farmer working ground,It was to wet In my opinion.Send some pics ATCOEQUIP.
Post some jobs & pictures ATCOEQUIP.I would like to see the tennessee blue sky.
I'll have to work on the pics, I don't have a digital camera. I'm the service manager of a shop nowdays, so I don't get out on many jobs. The pics I have of jobs past are still on film pics, don't have a scanner. But here's a pic I found of a job I worked on in Olmstead Illinois for the Corp of Engineers back in the mid 90's. The job was building new locking chambers on the Ohio river, west of Paducah Kentucky. A temporary Coffer Dam was built to "dry out" the river bed so the lock chambers could be built, a quarter mile wide and one half mile long. I was working for a drilling company, we installed wells and pumps in the Coffer Cells, the shoreline, and on the lock floor. We had a lot of pumps working on this site. If you were standing on the lock chamber floor, the Ohio river was 90 ft above you. The only thing between you and the river was the Coffer Dam. There were a lot of cranes on the site, on the ground as well as on barges.
Here's a couple of pics for ya', all I have is my cell phone so they ain't the greatest. I took them from Sharp's Ridge on the north side of downtown Knoxville. The first pic is looking NW toward Kentucky and Indiana, the Cumberland Mountains are in the distance. The next two pics are looking SE and E toward North Carolina, overlooking Knoxville, the Great Smoky Mountains are in the distance.
Well that does it! Now I am going to plan a vacation trip To Tennesse.We have some hills and nice view's in southern IN.But nothing like that.Great pics ATCOEQUIP!