I installed a grease drip tray beneath the lifting house year 2000. No pre job assessment, no harnesses, no flagging off ground area beneath. Just got er done the 3 of us.
@@geoffwhite7535 Krupps designed them along with H&W, they were both built by H&W on site, being up both them (I have as well) makes no difference to the debate.
I always wondered what the view was like from the crane cockpits every time I go past them while heading into Belfast
I installed a grease drip tray beneath the lifting house year 2000. No pre job assessment, no harnesses, no flagging off ground area beneath. Just got er done the 3 of us.
Great insight! I can see that I'm not the first person to make this comment but this clip really did give me vertigo!
i don't do heights , just watching this made my legs go to jelly
Thank you 😎👍
Fascinating views!
I'm terrified of heights. But I would give it a go, just for the view. What a pity it bwasntva nicer day. We could have seen so much farther.
I've vertigo just watching this
Imagine being claustrophobic and acrophobic while inside the crane.
Well usually you're only one or the other.
Awsome footage
Amazing.
Wow, that cab is out on a limb ... phew!!
I remember one of the cranes was white during the 80s, and people said i was wrong, but my memory was correct...
Great to see this, thank you.
wow
oh hello no u could never
K R U P P
Unfortunally not konecranes.
You can see UTV from here
built by Germans that bomb few years before
The construction of the cranes were a Joint venture between Harland and Wolff and Krupps, they were built on site by Shipyard workers.
@@georgebarnes8163 Krupps German
@@georgebarnes8163 been up both
@@geoffwhite7535 Krupps designed them along with H&W, they were both built by H&W on site, being up both them (I have as well) makes no difference to the debate.
Unfortunally not konecranes.