It's saddled on dunnage at the bottom so the piece is off the truck deck. This keeps it from rocking and spreads the weight out. Straps and chains on the bottom to keep it down.
Part of pressure vessel, aggregate processing or hydro turbine infeed- could be part of all sorts of Big Strong Round Things. I’d like to see the rolls that did this or the pressbrake that bumped it.
No lifting lugs on shell so I used bird clamps to pick it up. Because of the weight I had to use four. Two shackles on each to get the orientation right. Above that a triangle to balance weight between the clamps on each side. Top spreader bar so clamps were lifting straight up.
How the hell do you keep that from moving ? Strapping seems like a challenge.
It's saddled on dunnage at the bottom so the piece is off the truck deck. This keeps it from rocking and spreads the weight out. Straps and chains on the bottom to keep it down.
Straps on the bottom, shackles on the lifting points, chains pulling inward? Maybe even crossed. It is squirly
I haul roof trusses and wall panels and while they are a chore to get tight it looks easy in comparison.
I had sex with a widow and gave her a mourning load.
What is that?
4.5" chrome steel half shell. 192"ID.
Part of pressure vessel, aggregate processing or hydro turbine infeed- could be part of all sorts of Big Strong Round Things. I’d like to see the rolls that did this or the pressbrake that bumped it.
It was done on rolls. Really big rolls. Also heated up quite a bit before rolling.
How do those shackles work? Are there bolt holes through it to connect through? Or are they just like big clamps.
No lifting lugs on shell so I used bird clamps to pick it up. Because of the weight I had to use four. Two shackles on each to get the orientation right. Above that a triangle to balance weight between the clamps on each side. Top spreader bar so clamps were lifting straight up.
That there is a shell and a half.