JumbleDuck
Well-Known Member
so does this mean the erse just fell out the big boat in a yard going cheap market ??
Market sentiment has moved from "Buy" to "Ca' Canny".
so does this mean the erse just fell out the big boat in a yard going cheap market ??
But on the positive side as we're on 39,922 views as of Sunday night 11.30 pm Pyrenean Orientales time we might well crack 40,000 afore Monday morning.
Go Ellie Go!!
But on the positive side as we're on 39,922 views as of Sunday night 11.30 pm Pyrenean Orientales time we might well crack 40,000 afore Monday morning.
Go Ellie Go!!
Elizmor has been accepted onto the National Register of Historic Vessel of the United Kingdom!
http://elizmor.co.uk/blog/look-what-came-in-the-post/
I don't think anyone has behaved badly or been particularly difficult in this matter. Utube has a large selection of videos of crane lifts that have gone wrong.
Definitely not on this forum anyway, unless you want a red card or two weeks in the dungeons at IC Tower with some infamous forumites (and PaulineB) - oh, er chains, whips and thigh length high heeled boots stop it, stop it..well perhaps it's best not to say what you think on an open forum!
It's amazing when a heavy lift goes wrong that people believe they can rush in and push the lift away. It happens in my industry, by people who should know better, with disastrous results for the person involved. A client has what they call “Lifesaving Rules”, there are 12 of them, if you break them, you can get sacked or reeducated. They were derived from the few things that actually kill workers and there is one for lifting operations: “Never stand under a lifted object”. Now this might appear eminently sensible but if I had a dollar for every person who stands watching a lift, then walks under it as soon as it’s a few meters above the ground, I would be very wealthy; no concept of danger at all.
The lesson here is stay away from heavy lifts, the stored energy is incredible and we are just squishy things filled with mostly water behind some easily punctured coverings.
It's amazing when a heavy lift goes wrong that people believe they can rush in and push the lift away. It happens in my industry, by people who should know better, with disastrous results for the person involved. A client has what they call “Lifesaving Rules”, there are 12 of them, if you break them, you can get sacked or reeducated. They were derived from the few things that actually kill workers and there is one for lifting operations: “Never stand under a lifted object”. Now this might appear eminently sensible but if I had a dollar for every person who stands watching a lift, then walks under it as soon as it’s a few meters above the ground, I would be very wealthy; no concept of danger at all.
The lesson here is stay away from heavy lifts, the stored energy is incredible and we are just squishy things filled with mostly water behind some easily punctured coverings.
We have to lift out the gates at Porthleven with a 3500 Hi ab, eight pieces each about two tons. The crane safety man asked us what do we do to keep the general public out of the area (Which is chained off with warning signs) HM replied "Shoot 'em". Nothing else seems to work.
If only!
Not heavy lifting related, but we used traffic cones and tape around the club dance floor when resurfacing/finishing , still a member hopped over the tape and walked across the wet varnish while it was still being applied. " Oh I didn't realise.. " despite the tape.
Some people wear mental blinkers.
Some of those pics are real and some are fake. This happened in Roundstone, Co Galway in 2004.