It is super versatile as well. In the picture I was definitely overweight (legally), but it handled well at 70 plus MPH and I drove it almost 8 hours back from New York. If I didn't have the knuckleboom, I would be fine or if I had another axle on the truck. Plan is to use the big fire truck to make a tandem axle hauler, but the front end of that fire truck is so heavy that if I add the knuckleboom, I have to add an intermediate steering axle. Funny part is that there is another guy that did almost exactly that, he randomly posts on youtube, it would definitely look interesting. I would install the intermediate axle much closer to the cab, then the knuckleboom would be behind that, then a fifth wheel on the back, not a big winch.I’ll give ya that one, that’s a cool set up.

I'm behind, why do you have a Tru-Hitch? Are you planning on getting into extremely heavy towing?







And who doesn't like a bridge crane, very nice!Building upgrade update, the City had just sent a letter to me about revaluation of ALL commercial properties, they had just come out and taken recent pictures and measurements, kind of blew a hole in my plans. I decided to just say screw it and call them, they told me that I needed a full site plan, engineered drawings for everything, stormwater runoff, all the expensive stuff, then the guy says hold on a minute and literally put me on hold, but for ten minutes. I was expecting things to get much worse, but he came back on the line and said that he had talked to his boss and they will need me to apply for two permits, one 50% replacement and another 50% replacement. I was a bit confused at first, but he explained that since I was an oddball grandfathered commercial use in a residential zone I did not need the site plan, or any engineering at all. I just can't encroach any of the setbacks more than the building is currently. They just want drawings from me to show what the overall finished project will look like. I was honestly amazed at that answer, so I am good to go without having to try and hide things.
This lead into another rabbit hole, I decided that I would use this opportunity to install a larger bridge crane, one I didn't own yet. My engineer buddy will help me figure out the design and I already found a bridge crane that more than fits the bill. Now all I have to do is get equipment ready for the last weekend in May, then I just have to get the things dismantled in 48 hours, no problem, right???
When I went to look at the crane I was told that it was 80 or 100 feet long and 30' wide, it wasn't. It was a little under 30' wide and 200' long. There are two bridges, one is powered travel and has the 5 ton hoist, the other is manual and actually won't have any hoist as the owner is keeping it. Unfortunately it uses the building as uprights, so I am just getting the horizontal sections, but the price is right and I am not going to pass it up. Going to be a long weekend!
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It seems like the manufacturer was under the expectation that diamond plate would hide all imperfections. That's unbelieveable.I suspect that the diamond plate and shiny surface hide a ton of imperfections.
Mine isn't a bridge crane, but I love my oversized jib/gantry crane. They are so useful.And who doesn't like a bridge crane, very nice!
Do you think you'll ever catch a break? Sometimes I wonder.I was trying to use Perk and the knuckleboom to adjust a load that my forks just weren't long enough to handle, the remote appeared to be dead, I tried a spare battery and got nothing, they are 9 volt energizer lithium batteries, so I went into my stash, grabbed a new package, both said 2031 and while they made the remote "work", it was barely functional like they had no voltage. Now I have to do some testing and figure out if it is batteries or if it is the remote. I have had issues before, but never this issue, it either worked or it didn't, nothing halfway between. Fun stuff as always.![]()
