Work Photos

My first job for a fellow buzzer as well as his first crane job. He did it like a vet. 9 hours 6 trees and some really long stretches. Tested all of us including the crane. Great job Dave @BRT View attachment 52585View attachment 52586View attachment 52587View attachment 52588View attachment 52589View attachment 52590View attachment 52591
Awesome day Steve! Thanks for the kind words. Your experience and professionalism made the day a great success.

Love your rig! My guys love your rig! Our customer loves your rig!

I got some GoPro footage, but mostly of removing the logs. I'll get some of the limbs coming out when we do that job on the 18th. Try to put a vid together with those clips.
 
It has to deflect...when a national looks like that, trade that $hit in.
Yeah sometimes I have to walk away and look at a different angle or I get really uncomfortable. The pretension accuracy is so imperative with a flexible boom. Too much and you have a very expensive slingshot. The anti oscillation system can only compensate but so much. Getting a load cell was the best safest investment I've made to date. I don't understand how these guys do it by just looking at the LED lights on the remote. Maybe I just suck. It only took one good boomerang to know I needed the load cell. Luckily nothing or nobody was harmed in the making of that mistake. Oh yeah did I say the boom deflection is unsettling at times? Not just the operator but the sawyer has to have their cutting came on point. I've made some pretty crappy cuts with a stick crane and everything still came off pretty. Not the case with a springy boom. One little strap of wood and a pinched saw can take pretension up hundreds of pounds either vertically or off center creating torque where torque shouldn't be. I wonder if I could run a cable crane with any skill having worked a kboom for a while. I'd like to try. I'm wondering if it would be much more forgiving. Not saying less skill, just different.
 
Looks good to me Steve. I just drove by a job on Princess Anne that looked like you and your rig could’ve made the job much more simple and a cleaner outcome. Not judging them because I don’t know the whole plan with the property but lawn preservation didn’t seem to be on the forefront.
As much as I’d like to visit with you the wife and kids are keeping me busy. On a quick break from the beach now
 
Looks good to me Steve. I just drove by a job on Princess Anne that looked like you and your rig could’ve made the job much more simple and a cleaner outcome. Not judging them because I don’t know the whole plan with the property but lawn preservation didn’t seem to be on the forefront.
As much as I’d like to visit with you the wife and kids are keeping me busy. On a quick break from the beach now
Its fine man I understand. Yeah the companies around here generally only know a crane means cables. Plus they see a crane as taking away profit not helping make it. It's kinda ass backwards.
 
Same as my boss. A crane cost xxx a day. I agree that 99% of the work does not require a crane but man they can make 90% of the work go so much easier and be more “efficient”.
 
Yeah sometimes I have to walk away and look at a different angle or I get really uncomfortable. The pretension accuracy is so imperative with a flexible boom. Too much and you have a very expensive slingshot. The anti oscillation system can only compensate but so much. Getting a load cell was the best safest investment I've made to date. I don't understand how these guys do it by just looking at the LED lights on the remote. Maybe I just suck. It only took one good boomerang to know I needed the load cell. Luckily nothing or nobody was harmed in the making of that mistake. Oh yeah did I say the boom deflection is unsettling at times? Not just the operator but the sawyer has to have their cutting came on point. I've made some pretty crappy cuts with a stick crane and everything still came off pretty. Not the case with a springy boom. One little strap of wood and a pinched saw can take pretension up hundreds of pounds either vertically or off center creating torque where torque shouldn't be. I wonder if I could run a cable crane with any skill having worked a kboom for a while. I'd like to try. I'm wondering if it would be much more forgiving. Not saying less skill, just different.
Bring it to n.e. ohio...we can trade and try it out! I agree...a read out helps dramatically in our business. I was at a demo here in ohio about 6 years ago where effer paid mr. Poor to come in and they said in a year or 2 effer would have a load cell available...haven't heard anything yet.
 
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