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Tower cranes are a common fixture at any major construction site. They are pretty
hard to miss - they often rise hundreds of feet into the air, and can reach out just as
far. The construction crew uses the tower crane to lift steel, concrete, large tools like
acetylene torches and generators, and a wide variety of other building materials.
Tower cranes can rise 150 feet in the air and lift up
to 19 tons. See more pictures of tower cranes.
When you look at one of these cranes, what it can do seems nearly impossible: Why
doesn't it tip over? How can such a long boom lift so much weight? How is it able to
grow taller as the building grows taller? If you have ever wondered about how tower
cranes work, then this article is for you. In this article, you'll find out the answers to
all of these questions and more!
Parts of a Tower Crane
All tower cranes consist of the same basic parts:
• The base is bolted to a large concrete pad that supports the crane.
• The base connects to the mast (or tower), which gives the tower
crane its height.
• Attached to the top of the mast is the slewing unit -- the gear and
motor -- that allows the crane to rotate:
On top of the slewing unit are three parts:
• The long horizontal jib (or working arm), which is the portion of
the crane that carries the load. A trolley runs along the jib to move the
load in and out from the crane's center:
The machinery arm contains the motor that lifts the load, along with the control
electronics that drive it and the cable drum, as shown here:
The motors that drive the slewing unit are located above the unit's large gear:
Now let's find out how much weight this equipment can handle.
• The maximum load switch monitors the pull on the cable and
makes sure that the load does not exceed 18 tonnes.
• The load moment switch makes sure that the operator does not
exceed the tonne-meter rating of the crane as the load moves out on the
jib. A cat head assembly in the slewing unit can measure the amount of
collapse in the jib and sense when an overload condition occurs.
Now, it would be a pretty big problem if one of these things fell over on a job site.
Let's find out what keeps these massive structures standing upright.
Why Don't They Fall Over?
When you look at a tall tower crane, the whole thing seems outrageous -- why don't
these structures fall over, especially since they have no support wires of any kind?
The first element of the tower crane's stability is a large concrete pad that the
construction company pours several weeks before the crane arrives. This pad
typically measures 30 feet by 30 feet by 4 feet (10 x 10 x 1.3 meters) and weighs
400,000 pounds (182,000 kg) -- these are the pad measurements for the crane
shown here. Large anchor bolts embedded deep into this pad support the base of
the crane:
So these cranes are essentially bolted to the ground to ensure their stability. In the
next section, you'll learn how tower cranes "grow."
The fixed base-type tower crane has its tower mounted on a foundation
block. By the use of another (mobile) crane, the tower can be erected to its
full height at the beginning of the project or the crane can have the
mechanical capability, usually hydraulically, to raise itself, allowing for the
addition of structural sections to the tower.
Factors Affecting the Choice of Crane Location
Two fixed base tower cranes on concrete base were set up on-site; one with
a working radius of 35m and the other of 65m (both with lifting capacity of 4
tonnes)
Selection Criteria for Tower Cranes
The choice and utilization of a tower crane requires considerable planning. It
showed reach from its fixed position to all locations from which loads are to
be lifted and placed. Therefore, when selecting a crane for a particular
project, the engineer must ensure that the weight of the expected loads can
be handled at their corresponding required radius.
Tower cranes are selected for use based on factors such as:
• Site Constraints
• Site Layout
• Site Drainage
• Site Services
1. Cast a concrete base for the basic mast of the crane with timber formwork
2. Assemble the telescopic cage section on top of basic mast
3. Assemble the top mast section just under the mast cabin on top of cage
section
4. Erect the section of top tower containing the mast cabin above top mast
section
5. Fix the counter-jib perpendicular to the vertical tower using the counter-jib tie
6. Hang the counterweights at the end of the counter-jib
7. Install the main jib with the main jib tie
8. Hang the jib trolley on the main jib
After erecting the whole tower crane, it was ready for "raising" to the required
operating height. This was achieved by jacking up hydraulically the telescopic cage
section and then bringing extra standard mast sections into the telescopic cage
consecutively until sufficient height was reached.
Securing Basic
Moving Jibs Connecting Jibs Placing Re-bar
Mast
Introducing
Installing Lever Lifting Section
Section
Question:
How are the very tall construction cranes erected and taken down following
completion of the high rise project? Unfortunately I've never been present
when that activity is taking place. I'm particularly curious about how the
horizontal swing arm is placed with the counter balance at the There are at
least three different answers too your question.
1.) Some of the smaller units are self erecting and self dismantling. Essentially the
boom (swing arm) folds like an accordian door with three hinge points. The tower
has a bottom hinge and folds over and then lays down. This type of tower crane
must be erected exterior of the building so all of this folding and hinging can occur.
2.) Some are erected to final height at the beginning of the project, and they can
either be built into the building or just outside of the building. The boom is
positioned high enough so that it will clear the top of the building when finished, and
high enough so that it clears surronding buildings also. The tower is erected a piece
at a time (about 20' sections) until the proper height is reached. A large mobile( on
wheels) crane is used to hoist the pieces.
A pivot section is added on top of the tower, and then the boom and counter weight
extenions. Some times the boom has to be inserted in more than one section, adding
counter balancing sections on the opposite side. The boom is light enough and
strong enough that some amount of moment is managed through the tower
connections until the full boom and counterweights are all in place and the boom
becomes balanced. The process is just the opposite to remove it. When the crane
is erected in the building footprint and the building built around it; sometimes the
crane to remove it must be really big; as it must reach up and over the shoulder of
the building and still get above the standing tower high enough to lift the pieces off.
3.) A variation on the theme is a jumping tower crane. It usually starts with about
about 100' of tower. There is an apparatus in the tower section just below the pivot
section that allows additional tower sections to be slid into a jacked up gap. The
tower crane then lifts its own tower section onto the apparatus and this new section
is inserted.
This procedure is repeated as the building rises. This keeps the operator closer to
the work so he or she can see it better. This crane is dismantled the same as #2
above.
end.
How do they dismantle tower cranes when they have been assembled
within a structure?