Hi Keith I agree that it is unwise to allow anyone under the working area of a crane.
News Report said:
Workers were in the process of lowering and securing the 565-feet-tall crane this morning before it was toppled over by 25 mph winds. "The crew was directing people away from Worth St. as the crane was being lowered," according to de Blasio.
I'm thinking that the jib should have been luffed or lowered first. There appears to be a large wheel or wheels at the end of the jib.
These are common on large cranes of this type.
As these cranes are errected, the main boom is lifted first and the end of the jib is allowed to roll along the ground. When the main boom is near vertical, the jib may then be safely raised.
I susspect that they did not intend to lower the crane all the way to the ground.
They may have been intending to only lower it enough that there was no danger of the wind blowing it over backwards, as in Mecca.
That would explain lowering it with the jib in the working position.
A combination of ice build-up, the extended jib and gusting wind may have moved the center of gravity out past the end of the tracks.
Once the crane starts to fall, the radius of the boom CG increases and continues to increase and the radius of the CG of the crawler part complete with counter weights decreases and continues to decrease. From that point, there is no going back.
Bill
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"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter