Demag AC 500-8 girder hoist

20 October 2020

Virginia-based crane rental house W.O. Grubb Crane Rental used its Demag AC 500-8 all terrain crane on a bridge replacement project in Lockhart, S.C. The task required hoisting and placing 30 concrete girders onto piers for construction of the new SC Highway 9/49 Broad River Bridge. The new bridge will replace a functionally obsolete 730-foot structure. The new structure is part of a $20 million project to update multiple bridges in this area.

Demag AC 500-8 girder hoist

The crane was derigged, moved and set up again a total of four times

The crane was mobilized from W.O. Grubb’s Greensboro, N.C., branch roughly 150 miles to the project site. W.O. Grubb has owned its Demag AC 500-8 all terrain crane for nearly two years, during which time it has been used for a wide range of applications.

The crane meets axle load limits with 183.7 feet of main boom installed and travels to project sites at highway speeds reaching 50 mph, said Demag brand owner Tadano. Within a day, the company’s six-man rigging crew had the crane, counterweight, Sideways Superlift, hook block and rigging material on site, staged and ready for rigging.

02_fixed

W.O. Grubb lifted 30 girders weighing 80 tons each.

The next day, workers rigged the crane in its HA-SSL configuration with 396,800 pounds of counterweight and had it ready to lift the girders. The Sideways Superlift was set to a 30-degree angle to provide the required lift capacity, especially when working at a long radius.

Over the course of the job the crane was derigged, moved and set up again four times. According to Tadano, its fast setup time helped facilitate this. Once the all terrain was in position, it completed all girder lifts planned for that location with working radii reaching 100 feet. Crew members then derigged the crane by removing the counterweight in preparation for the move to the next pad. The counterweight had to be removed due to the crane needing to travel across uneven ground and over the existing bridge. To help stay on schedule, though, the crew retracted the main boom and kept the Sideways Superlift and outriggers installed, enabling them to derig, move and setup the AC 500-8 in just one shift.

The girders lifted weighed 80-tons and were approximately 80 feet long. The AC 500-8 lifted the girders from transport trucks with the assistance of a 200-ton crawler crane.

Up to 169.9 feet of boom was needed. With this configuration, Tadano said, the AC 500-8 had a capacity of more than 85,000 pounds at its 100-foot maximum working radius.

W.O. Grubb was on site three weeks and completed the project on time.

STAY CONNECTED

Receive the information you need when you need it through our world-leading magazines, newsletters and daily briefings.

Sign up