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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 2/14/2014 Posts: 151 Location: Dallas
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This passed weekend I went to a bridge site where I-30 crosses the trinity river where they are building an arch bridge This was the anchor for the arch the first and only one compleated so far   "/> View of the site the LR1300 was brand new   "/> Manitowoc 999 with pile driver   "/> It was getting dark fast   "/> Here is the brand new 1300   "/> [img  ][/img]   "/>   "/> This was the other 1300   "/> There was some other stuff like a tadano rt crane or some of the other Manitowoc cranes that were there and if you would like to see just let me know
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 2/14/2014 Posts: 151 Location: Dallas
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Its been awhile since I last posted but some new equipment has showed up on 635 The biggest arrival was this brand new 374F L I have not seen it working yet but its being used to dig ditches for storm water pipes Got these pictures while driving by and from a near by pedestrian bridge.   "/>   "/>   "/>   "/>   "/>   "/>
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 2/14/2014 Posts: 151 Location: Dallas
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Also an update on 635 progress   "/> Where the white crane is, an aquaduct will go there eventually connecting the storm water pipes from each side of highway   "/> 349E This was also working on laying storm water pipes   "/> 374D L   "/> Not to far from 635 on I-35 east demolition has started for the next highway expansion project there   "/> Bridge work has already begun there to.   "/>   "/>   "/>   "/>   "/>
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 6/27/2013 Posts: 937 Location: Quebec, Canada,
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She look massive (374F).
___________________________________________________ Playing with toys since 1970, now building them.
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 7/1/2006 Posts: 2,495 Location: Buffalo, NY
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Man, that 374F makes those jersey barriers look like curbs!!
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 12/30/2008 Posts: 3,439 Location: Good ol' Indiana
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Nice pictures. Those projects are quite involved. I wonder how the 374F performs. I got to see a 374D we rented on one of our sewer projects in 2013. We all came to the assumption it was disappointing. It did not have very good balance, not enough "Junk in the trunk". We were using a 5 foot bucket on it with a long arm and it would just about tip over before the arm was all the way out. (We were digging 25' down so we had to hog out a lot of dirt). Granted it was heavy blue clay, but still seemed underwhelming. Maybe we accidentally rented a light counterweight version. It did have power to pull boxes. Lots of power. Probably a good loading machine. A lot more power than the 345's.
-Ethan Collection 8/2/2016For more of the Diorama and my collection: On Facebook or On YouTube
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 7/26/2010 Posts: 807 Location: Lansing, Michigan
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That particular 374 probably handles fine with that setup, i've seen a Deere 850D with a long stick and a 5 ft bucket dig 25' for sewer over the summer and it was always tipping forward when the bucket was being pulled up but once it was above ground a ways it was fine, same thing like 385s or in this case 374's any big excavator with a long stick or arm and a big bucket is gonna struggle keeping its balance when digging at deep depths and wet material, I've also seen a 375L in a sand pit struggle to stay balanced when moving just sand.
Now you could spend the extra $$$ and get a add on CW to make it more stable but then you have to deal with it when it comes time to transport the machine, my guess would be that contractors the do underground unities that run the big boys just deal with the unbalanced machine.
Zack
"You can take the kid out of the sand box , But you can't take the sand box out of the Kid."
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 6/4/2006 Posts: 7,752 Location: arlington, Tx
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 2/14/2014 Posts: 151 Location: Dallas
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