Most of my past LSTG power plant experience has been along the Gulf coast in the USA where outdoor and open TG units are common. I have never seen one without a gantry crane. Is it possible Knight that the instructor's photos were shot at an angle where the crane was parked out of the view?
My more recent experience is with the type units that Scotty mentions and none of them are inside in my part of the world at least. I have seen some inside in Canada, but it is never warm there other than the 3 days of summer that they have there. (see tongue in cheek)
Most outage work is spring and fall and except for certain parts of spring, weather is not as much of a factor in the deep south other than just waiting it out when it is too bad to work. But, then, too, the weather that time of year is fast moving fronts as opposed to the dreary days of continuous rain during the winter, so it was never too long of a wait. And, work can be done under tarps and tents.
The large turbine rooms start appearing north of a line stretching between Dallas and Birmingham as I remember it. North of that, cold weather can linger well into the spring. I can think of outdoor units in Jackson, MS and a large turbine room 90 miles north in Greenville, MS.
It is the cold as much as the wet that affects productivity to my way of thinking.
Most power plant contractors in my experience in order to get people to work that type of work wanted to work 6 tens. That gave the lads one day off to do their laundry, etc. They couldn't get people to travel away from home jobs for 40 hr/wk work.
Contractors that bid fixed price work bid it on a break even basis and then hope to load it up with higher margin work for "extras". I saw one power plant operator who did all the "extras" with their own crews and denied the contractor any extra work and that contractor still moans about that job until this day.
When you go to 12 hr days, you get 10 hrs work stretched into 12 hours. And, Knight, I agree with you. When fixed price is bid, then the contractor just has to do what it takes to get it done. But that said, then they look for every excuse to blame the utility when they can't work; say like when someone else has the crane tied up so the games go on and on.
rmw