Back in the late 1960s I drove lorry mounted cranes in London UK. sadly hydraulic jibbed cranes were only just invented and the depot I worked from only had one. Mine was a 7ton Allen Grove fitted with a strut jib that when unfolded made up a standard 30ft jib, one job I did needed a 60ft jib but was in a Royal park. To lift the jib and not damage any of the old trees, I had to lift 5ft reverse back and repeat this until the the jib as at the correct angle. This took ages jumping from the crane cab to the truck cab, only to carry out a single lift of three tubes welded in a triangle to make a flag pole, this took 20 mins to complete and then the jib lowering and pull forward operation all over again. The flag pole was for the Russian Embassy. Another crane I drove was a Ruston Bucyrus tower crane mounted on crawler tracks. It came to site completely folded up and bogie wheels attached that made it an articulated trailer. Once onsite the outriggers lifted the base up and the road wheels were removed. Rams lifted the main tower to upright. Rigging cables were used to lift the boom to the outright position and fixed position cable connected. The tower had a second tower section with the first section, using the hoist cable this could be raised to double the height. A build up or fold down would take 3 or 4 hours, which was way quicker than the dismantle method and only a tractor unit was needed to pull the crane to the next job site. Great to see how crane have developed since then and what a great background to film in. Many thanks for posting.
Very nice operation. Here in Toronto area, these knucklebooms are just coming into their own. Our company has 4 big ones, biggest being a 200tm. They're absolutely amazing for working in the city in restricted areas, under and around trees, between wires and narrow laneways. I've had one set up from the street going low under the wires, up the hill to the house, over the front steps and 12 feet (3.5m) through the front door into the house with a steel beam for a reno. We move those swimspas daily, setup in the driveway, pickup over the nose and swing around over the house and into the backyard. In and out in an hour, usually.
Dude, i remember when the Facebook group was new, amd now here you are, making awesome high quality videos. I love it, keep up the great work - I subbed. Btw, I love your background music, very chill, not too loud, dosent draw too much attention. Thank you!
It’s so cool to see cranes from other countries. How compact they are. Reminds me of a transformer with how big they get when they are fully opened and the boom is up and out.
Nice video! Interesting to see how they work on a hill. I work with a 125tm effer in NL. The only problem I have is sinking into the soft ground. We also use two 225tm erkin cranes in my company that still fold sideways behind the cab. I wonder why palfinger needs an entire truck for 200tm. But this company does have very nice trucks!
So basically Austrian crane mounted on a Swedish truck operated by a Polish guy lifting a small pool made in China for a family i Norway? Seems like 1000 kg could've easily been moved by 4 - 6 power lifters from the local training center?
that is one epic view for that hot tub and worth the money hiring a crane - would have been a major pain to dismantle it and carry it round the house be hand so thanks to the magic of steel and hydraulics no pain required.
@@mx2000 it’s the same as with any building project - if you get tiler to tile the bathroom, the cost of labour sometimes can exceed the cost tiles applied (depending on the size of bathroom)
Very impressive crane. That job must have cost as much as a used car, but it's a property expense, so it will benefit the residents for decades to come.
Great movie, production is really good! I think they call them swim spa in Sweden, you can actually swim against the stream if you don't have space for a big pool
@@WhiskeyGulf71 I know, I’ve been to many areas of UK myself but haven’t seen cranes to be set up in these extremities. I myself had maybe 2 or 3 jobs in the last 17 years where I had to lift front up off the floor but nowhere this high 😅
Why does one choose this kind of crane instead of a mobile crane for this particular job? Are they so much heavier or expensive? Considering 2 trucks were needed I guess it must have been quite expensive in the end anyways?
This is going to be a very expensive hot tub. 2 trucks and 4 guys. Call a 45 ton Liebherr that has his own large outrigger pads with him and he would have done this in less then 1 hour, 1 man. No wonder why Norway is expensive, and i thought Iceland was expensive. Also turn the truck around, use the front outrigger, then more of the trucks weight is behind him and you don´t have to lift as far...
@@Craneformers Yes, but there is no winch man needed, last time I used helikopter it flo 9 times front and bak 100 meter with material, 1 pilot and 2 x ground men, price 29.000 norwaigan krona. It could lift max 1100 kg
@@einarsimonarson5065 Fair enough. Might be great solution for bulk materials but doubt it has the same level of accuracy for precision lifting. I’ve seen a lot of helicopters being used in remote locations for power lines stringing works or in London high rise roof work where permit to setup crane in highly congested streets was too expensive.
@@KjetilBalstad In future You might want to order swim spa or replace the roof covering - so now you know about the ways of doing it 😉 thanks for watching
Back in the late 1960s I drove lorry mounted cranes in London UK. sadly hydraulic jibbed cranes were only just invented and the depot I worked from only had one. Mine was a 7ton Allen Grove fitted with a strut jib that when unfolded made up a standard 30ft jib, one job I did needed a 60ft jib but was in a Royal park. To lift the jib and not damage any of the old trees, I had to lift 5ft reverse back and repeat this until the the jib as at the correct angle. This took ages jumping from the crane cab to the truck cab, only to carry out a single lift of three tubes welded in a triangle to make a flag pole, this took 20 mins to complete and then the jib lowering and pull forward operation all over again. The flag pole was for the Russian Embassy.
Another crane I drove was a Ruston Bucyrus tower crane mounted on crawler tracks. It came to site completely folded up and bogie wheels attached that made it an articulated trailer. Once onsite the outriggers lifted the base up and the road wheels were removed. Rams lifted the main tower to upright. Rigging cables were used to lift the boom to the outright position and fixed position cable connected. The tower had a second tower section with the first section, using the hoist cable this could be raised to double the height. A build up or fold down would take 3 or 4 hours, which was way quicker than the dismantle method and only a tractor unit was needed to pull the crane to the next job site.
Great to see how crane have developed since then and what a great background to film in. Many thanks for posting.
@@TheByard Beautiful story! It’s interesting to hear from seasoned people how things were done back in the day 🤩 much appreciated comment! Thank You
4:57 Anders is a legend for wearing that shirt to a job site 😂
Helse Miljø og Flaks = Health Environment and Luck 😝
I just took delivery of my PK200002. I'm located in New York City. I plan on posting videos as well. Great stuff, great machine.
easylie the best loader crane content on youtube. we need more of that!
We aim to please our viewers 😊
No idea how the algorithm ended me up here on a video about a crane lift (even if I'm Norwegian), but I'm glad it did!
Very nice operation. Here in Toronto area, these knucklebooms are just coming into their own. Our company has 4 big ones, biggest being a 200tm. They're absolutely amazing for working in the city in restricted areas, under and around trees, between wires and narrow laneways. I've had one set up from the street going low under the wires, up the hill to the house, over the front steps and 12 feet (3.5m) through the front door into the house with a steel beam for a reno. We move those swimspas daily, setup in the driveway, pickup over the nose and swing around over the house and into the backyard. In and out in an hour, usually.
fun fact. Alot of those bigger steel plates used for cranes and temporary bridges over smal ditches are actually from the german battleship Tirpitz
Fun fact.. those plates were 5 centimeters thick.. and in 2013 there was only 1 plate still in use..
@@R.E.HILL_ oh really, didnt know they had stopped using them. But still it is a fun fact
@imortaliz what you said might have been fun, but it was no fact
@@kallenavn2783 what you mean? are y ou saying tirpitz steel wasnt used for that ?
Dude, i remember when the Facebook group was new, amd now here you are, making awesome high quality videos. I love it, keep up the great work - I subbed.
Btw, I love your background music, very chill, not too loud, dosent draw too much attention. Thank you!
@@KNJensen Wow at is really flattering 😇 massive thank you for your support 🤩
@@Craneformers No worries ;)
Do you have any Danish contacts? We have a lot of big loadercranes, Erkins, MPGs, big Effers and so on :)
It’s so cool to see cranes from other countries. How compact they are. Reminds me of a transformer with how big they get when they are fully opened and the boom is up and out.
Hence our name: Craneformers 😁
@@Craneformers I’m so dumb I didn’t notice that.
Amazing video. Makes me love and appreciate crane work even more. Also the location would be wonderful to live in.
Enjoyable video. Got Scania Super. Some beast of a crane. And nice editing. Success!
When you said floating.... Not what I thought of lol but very impresive indeed!
Great job. here in Canada we turn it side ways on to rollers and roll it or take them apart and move and put it back together . Cheers
Impressive work…..👍👌🇮🇲
Great video, Fun to see how it's done in other countries.
Another quality video making our 82s look tiny in the U.K. Keep em coming son !
Also the music is really good!
Appreciate it!
First time that I've seen a video from you. Absolutely impressive. Hint for the next time: secure your helmet....
Hej, widzialem ze ta firma Dan czesto sie oglaszala na finie. Czy mozna sie w niej wyszkolic jako poczatkujacy G8 czy raczej nie bardzo ?
Zawsze lepiej jak już masz uprawnienia, ale myśle ze dla odpowiedniej osoby napewno znalazłoby się miejsce. Trzeba zapukać bezpośrednio.
Nice video! Interesting to see how they work on a hill. I work with a 125tm effer in NL. The only problem I have is sinking into the soft ground.
We also use two 225tm erkin cranes in my company that still fold sideways behind the cab. I wonder why palfinger needs an entire truck for 200tm.
But this company does have very nice trucks!
@@ivoreekers6655 it would be interesting to compare these 225tm against Palfinger 165tm 😇
So basically Austrian crane mounted on a Swedish truck operated by a Polish guy lifting a small pool made in China for a family i Norway? Seems like 1000 kg could've easily been moved by 4 - 6 power lifters from the local training center?
@@swedishpsychopath8795 you nearly got that right but quite 😉
Hvor mange millioner nok koster dette monsteret? Fantastisk maskin
NOK 12mln
that is one epic view for that hot tub and worth the money hiring a crane - would have been a major pain to dismantle it and carry it round the house be hand so thanks to the magic of steel and hydraulics no pain required.
How much was the lift of the jacuzzi? Probably more than the cost of the jacuzzi, right? 😅
@@mx2000 it’s the same as with any building project - if you get tiler to tile the bathroom, the cost of labour sometimes can exceed the cost tiles applied (depending on the size of bathroom)
Very impressive crane. That job must have cost as much as a used car, but it's a property expense, so it will benefit the residents for decades to come.
Thats an amazing video keep up the good work 😉💪🏻
Thank You 😍
Great movie, production is really good!
I think they call them swim spa in Sweden, you can actually swim against the stream if you don't have space for a big pool
It's good to know, you learn something new every day!😊 We didn't know the full story until we were committed to the lift
We have plenty of hills in England thanks ! The east of England maybe quite flat but we have plenty of other areas that are very hilly.
@@WhiskeyGulf71 I know, I’ve been to many areas of UK myself but haven’t seen cranes to be set up in these extremities. I myself had maybe 2 or 3 jobs in the last 17 years where I had to lift front up off the floor but nowhere this high 😅
Why does one choose this kind of crane instead of a mobile crane for this particular job? Are they so much heavier or expensive? Considering 2 trucks were needed I guess it must have been quite expensive in the end anyways?
Great video 🙌
Thank you 🙌
How much would a lift like that cost?
Grow bro grow
Does using a boom crane be easier?
For that distance and weight you would need a fair size mobile crane
I put 1in a garden in alrewas uk 16ft by 8ft
If you dont know, you need a licence to fly a drone in norway :) just a heads up
unless its a small drone up to 250g
This is going to be a very expensive hot tub. 2 trucks and 4 guys. Call a 45 ton Liebherr that has his own large outrigger pads with him and he would have done this in less then 1 hour, 1 man. No wonder why Norway is expensive, and i thought Iceland was expensive. Also turn the truck around, use the front outrigger, then more of the trucks weight is behind him and you don´t have to lift as far...
Double check the duty chart of your quoted crane
Already Krazy prices in Norway . Vould be cheaper with 10 guis karrying the whole thing.
We use a helicopter for such a move.
That operation must have cost a small fortune. Way more than the jaccusi, I presume
Trust me, the people living in that area don't care about the cost..
They almost live in the water but still Need a Pool…?? 🤨
Oslo fiord =/= hot tub.
Allowed to film from the privat property?
@@philip4588 The guy was happy to film, if he objected we wouldn’t be putting this on here.
It would have cost about $2000 to get a helicopter to do this, and take much less time.
@@einarsimonarson5065 are you sure? have you thought about ground men’s wages?
@@Craneformers Yes I'm sure, the helicopter comes with 2 ground crew, no one other than they are allowed to hang things on the helicopter.
@@einarsimonarson5065 so you’re telling me to hire a helicopter with crew of 4 (pilot, winch man, 2 x ground men) is cheaper than crane hire? 🤔
@@Craneformers Yes, but there is no winch man needed, last time I used helikopter it flo 9 times front and bak 100 meter with material, 1 pilot and 2 x ground men, price 29.000 norwaigan krona. It could lift max 1100 kg
@@einarsimonarson5065 Fair enough. Might be great solution for bulk materials but doubt it has the same level of accuracy for precision lifting. I’ve seen a lot of helicopters being used in remote locations for power lines stringing works or in London high rise roof work where permit to setup crane in highly congested streets was too expensive.
$$$ for that crane for a Spa bath lift.
you have never spent a day with a british crane operator if you think that
Show the example to your quote
@@Craneformers ditto, we use wood blocks all the time just depends on where
Why did I watch this? I have no interest in cranes :o
@@KjetilBalstad In future You might want to order swim spa or replace the roof covering - so now you know about the ways of doing it 😉 thanks for watching
I guess "floating" means something different in Europe.
More than half of it is off the floor, so I guess it’s pretty close
no need for all the music... it simply gets annoying to listen to when you play it over every single second of your video...