In order to view all images, please register and log in. This will also allow you to comment on our stories and have the option to receive our email alerts. Click here to register
10.06.2011

Hot tub tip

A crane crashed into a house in Shoreview, Minnesota – near St Paul -yesterday after it tipped while lifting a large hot tub/pool into the back yard.

The crane, a four axle Grove truck crane owned and operated by local crane rental company Truck Crane Service Company of Eagan, Minnesota. The crane was properly set up with outrigger mats in place and all outriggers fully extended.

Fortunately no one was hurt and the damage was surprisingly light with a garage roof and a chimney badly damaged. The crane’s boom is also likely to be a casualty.
Please register to see all images

The damage was surprisingly light


The company quickly called in two other mobile cranes and completed the recovery and clean up by nightfall. The homeowner was reportedly told that the accident was caused by ‘A computer malfunction’ – it looks of course like a classic overload, possibly brought on by some sort of input error on the rated load indicator?
Since our initial report a video of the lift has appeared on U-Tube- click here to see it
Truck Crane Service is one of oldest crane rental companies in North America, founded in 1940. It is part of the Phillippi/Peco Equipment group.

Vertikal Comment

Lifting Hot tubs, swimming pools and trees from or into the back yards of homes seems to be the most dangerous types of lifts that crane rental companies get involved with. At least in terms of the number of incidents reported compared to the number of lifts carried out.

If you add to this the fact that in many cases they are not the most lucrative of contracts and one can imagine some companies choosing to avoid them.

The problem is perhaps that they appear to be easy – “just pop along and place a hot tub in the back garden- an hour or so and it should be done.” Easy money en route to another lift – expect too often it ends like this one and costs a fortune with the additional pain of the media exposure.

I suppose such accidents are a classic illustration that there are few ‘routine and simple crane jobs’.

Comments


If you watch the video, I am sure you can hear the overload alarm in the background, looking at that spa and the boom length / angle there's no way that crane would be good for that, in my opinion. And to tip a 4 axle truck mount over the rear with any asli setting is incredulous. I wonder if the operator put the bulldog clip in his pocket before climbing down? (You all know what I mean :)). Thank goodness no one was hurt.

Jun 28, 2011