NZ Crane Group News
New Zealand Crane Group fits TRAM
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New Zealand Crane Group is installing Standfast’s TRAM – Travel Restraint Access Module – fall protection system, on every crane in its fleet above 80 tonnes. TRAM Australia Pacific worked closely with Grove distributor Tidd Ross Todd and NZ Crane on the first units to produce a methodology for fixing the rail to the booms. The precise method can vary for each crane type, depending on such diverse features as the location of rope retainers and angle of tilt of the cab. Previous TRAM installations have seen the rail welded or banded on the boom. TRT engineering director Robert Carden proposed a chemical bonding solution instead, where the brackets that hold the rail are bonded to the boom by pressure injecting an epoxy resin into the joint. Carden explains: “We have used this method for the past six years to bond the fibreglass insert into our steel booms for live-line aerial platforms. We have also used it to bond the trailing boom trailer mast mounts under the boom of a GMK 4100 and GMK 5130-1.” The TRAM post moves easily down the boom - note the bonded rail TRAM Australia Pacific director Martin Jones designed a bracket that forms to the contour of the boom and laps over each side at the top, to resist shear forces. “Grove has been very helpful in supplying me with drawings of their boom profiles,” he says. “This allowed me to manufacture brackets more easily knowing that they fit perfectly.” The bonding process has been designed and tested to AS/NZS 1891.4: 2009 Industrial Fall Arrest Systems and Devices – Selection Use and Maintenance, and certified to equivalent international standards. While welding and strapping have both worked perfectly well on other installations, Jones believes that bonding has the benefit of looking very neat. The requirement for overnight curing adds to the installation time and there was an additional cost to the first two units simply because they were the first, but costs are expected to reduce rapidly. Manley says the benefits of TRAM go beyond knowing that his workers are more likely to get home alive, there are also commercial rewards. It helps to position the company as likely supplier of choice for any customer that takes safety seriously. And it has been a key component of a safety programme that has secured a 20 percent discount on insurance premiums for the country’s mandatory Accident Compensation Corporation scheme. “It’s a no brainer,” Manley concludes. “The only reason why you wouldn’t fit TRAM is because you are too miserable.” 30th August 2011 |
