JAE
Structural
- Jun 27, 2000
- 15,591
One in New York. Then another. This one in Wyoming:
Seems like I remember a few others, too.
It seems we are seeing a rash of crane failures in the last several months. I wonder if this is a result of just a bunch of old cranes finally reaching the end of their lives vs. poor maintenance or what? I feel that bridges tend to at least have inspections performed every so often. Does anyone know if there is an agency or inspection standard that these cranes must pass or is it totally up to the crane company/contractor to monitor?
Public safety is definitely affected by this yet as a structural engineer I'm not sure whether there is an oversight by engineers in these things.
Seems like I remember a few others, too.
It seems we are seeing a rash of crane failures in the last several months. I wonder if this is a result of just a bunch of old cranes finally reaching the end of their lives vs. poor maintenance or what? I feel that bridges tend to at least have inspections performed every so often. Does anyone know if there is an agency or inspection standard that these cranes must pass or is it totally up to the crane company/contractor to monitor?
Public safety is definitely affected by this yet as a structural engineer I'm not sure whether there is an oversight by engineers in these things.