Tips and Tricks of flatbedding

Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Flightline, Feb 23, 2014.

  1. skellr

    skellr Road Train Member

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    The wire rope on a crane spool has a better anchor point than a strap partially through a spool.

    Unwind the cable to the end of a spool, right up to the anchor. It will hold the weight of the cable. A strap won't do that.
     
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  3. 2CAN

    2CAN Medium Load Member

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    Count me in as a short strapper...no issues ever
     
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  4. FoolsErrand

    FoolsErrand Road Train Member

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    Do we need a disputes of flatbedding thread?

    :p
     
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  5. skellr

    skellr Road Train Member

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    Lol, this dispute always comes up every so-often. No big deal. :)
     
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  6. johndeere4020

    johndeere4020 Road Train Member

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    No it doesn’t, it’s held by a wire clamp until it wraps. Crane manufacturers have a minimum number of wraps required to be on the drum.
     
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  7. skellr

    skellr Road Train Member

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    So a crane manufactur s requirements are important but a winch manufacturer are not? Ok.
     
  8. johndeere4020

    johndeere4020 Road Train Member

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    No your twisting my words, the reason wire rope stays on the drum is friction caused by multiple wraps not a mechanical connection. The same thing applies to straps on a winch, you wrap that strap around a couple revolutions you’ll pull the strap in two before it slips of the spool.
     
  9. 2CAN

    2CAN Medium Load Member

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    This would be a non issue if three bar wenches were more common, until a bunch of mouth breathing idiots screwed those up too many times
     
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  10. skellr

    skellr Road Train Member

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    Am I twisting your words? The drum on the crane isn't only relying only on having the cable spooled around the drum multiple times to increase friction enough to hold the weight. It has an anchor, as does a strap winch.

    You only want to "anchor" the strap in a winch halfway, halfway bieng conservative here. Try only securing the cable anchor of the crane halfway. Sure, it will probably get by for a while, but the possibility for failure just went up quite a bit no?

    Why even take the chance?
     
  11. johndeere4020

    johndeere4020 Road Train Member

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    A crane drum absolutely relies on friction of the wraps, the mechanical connection is just to keep the cable in place to start that wrapping.

    Here’s a screen shot from a video showing the process of wrapping a drum. Do you think that little block tightened with a wrench is going to hold that cable? Of course not, that’s why the manufacturer has recommended minimum number of wraps that have to be on the drum. The crane drum is 100% reliant on friction.

    0BBE7CD8-DDF7-4274-BAF4-8FF42E093BE7.png
     

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