|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 9/22/2007 Posts: 5,860 Location: Louisville
|
few weeks ago, i posted a thread of a fellow member, shane, that built his own boom booster for his 8800. he sent me a couple pics on my Facebook page and wanted me to share them. and since seeing his, he gave me a few tips and helped me with building one of my own. so soon after i saw his, i drew out the plan to scale, and started ordering materials. mine is slightly different then his as i couldn't find any hollow square tubing the right size, but came across some carbon fiber tubing from an rc plane shop. i also got solid bar that would slide inside it perfectly, to create the bend on the adaptor ends and the tips for the connection points to the old boom. rest of the boom is all aluminum tubing. Im not sure how many hours I've spent on this project but id say atlas 50 so far. i still have yet to add the telex color and the walkway up the length of the boom. but its 98% done. being my first major custom project, i think it came out pretty good. its not perfect by no means but I'm satisfied. it measures 56.5 inches tall by 8 inches wide and 1 5/8 thick. i still need to get the extra mast insert and floating tray to make it "right" to the true cc8800-1, also need to get the brass sheaves as well. i plan on getting those soon. i want the metal pendants too but the way it looks, ill be spending atlas another 700 bucks alone on those! so those will have to wait.. anyways, here you guys go, if you haven't already seen from my Facebook page. i plan to take it outside soon and add the luffer to it. waiting on a warm dry day, ground is covered in snow much like the rest of the country right now... lifting 7.8lb ratchet set max main boom configuration according to terex anyone with this model, knows how heavy that wagon fully loaded is, and know how hard it is to make that bad boy float! she's lifting about 55-60 tons at 8ft radius
Brandon my youtube channelMy Facebook Page
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 2/16/2009 Posts: 903 Location: Peace Dale, R.I.
|
Ain't scratch building fun?!!!!! Very nice Brandon. Nice set of plans and beautiful execution!!! This is a piece that you can be proud of. TM
__________________________________________________________________ Tom It's pretty sad when the only modeling tool you own is a box cutter.
If the only tool you have is a hammer, you start to see every problem as a nail. Abraham Maslow
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 6/1/2006 Posts: 4,065 Location: Dublin Ireland
|
Crazy work Brandon! looks fantastic!! I would love to tackle one at some point too,thanks for sharing the pics and making vids too!
Why is "phonetically" spelt with a "ph"?
... It's better to be silent and thought a fool, then to speak up and remove all doubt
The complex of Newgrange was originally built between c. 3100 and 2900 BC,[2] meaning that it's aproximately 5,000 years old. According to Carbon-14 dates,[3] it is more than 500 years older than the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt, and predates Stonehenge by about 1,000 years.
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 2/3/2015 Posts: 643 Location: New Hampshire
|
Im not a crane collector but THAT Is Impressive!! Fantastic work! Be sure to post pics when it's completely done!
- Kyle
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 12/30/2008 Posts: 3,439 Location: Good ol' Indiana
|
I have been following this on FB and it is quite impressive. As if the CC 8800 was not big enough. A lot of work and it looks very straight and true. Got to like that white stuff coming down outside right now.
-Ethan Collection 8/2/2016For more of the Diorama and my collection: On Facebook or On YouTube
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 1/7/2014 Posts: 213 Location: Arizona
|
Been following your project here and on facebook. While I can see it a huge piece, it did not sink in until the photo with the scale workman. Nice job.
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 10/7/2005 Posts: 2,495 Location: Shetland
|
Wow Brandon, amazing work and amazing photos!.
Scania V8. The best sounding truck in the world.
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 4/13/2011 Posts: 1,021 Location: California
|
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 4/18/2008 Posts: 174 Location: australia
|
Great build nice work .What glue you using or are you soldering the joints Leon
|
|
Rank: Member Groups: Member
Joined: 11/29/2011 Posts: 96
|
Great work Brandon,would you be interested in posting up plans for other people to build it.
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 5/15/2013 Posts: 222 Location: Netherlands
|
Awesome!
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 1/13/2014 Posts: 158 Location: Olympia, WA
|
That's a mighty fine boom booster you got there Brandon. Great work!
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 9/22/2007 Posts: 5,860 Location: Louisville
|
Thanks guys, I am very happy with the way it came out. Would much rather have it come apart though like the real one, so I could do an assembly video but oh well. Being one solid piece, it's much more stronger. I used JB weld epoxy to attach each piece, then sanded each joint the best I could. Like I said she's not perfect but I'm satisfied.
Brandon my youtube channelMy Facebook Page
|
|
Rank: Member Groups: Member
Joined: 1/24/2015 Posts: 21 Location: South Australia,
|
Well done there Brandon. You do put alot of faith in those plastic Pennant Lines dont you. Looks good with all that Main boom in it as well.
Shane
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 2/14/2003 Posts: 2,353 Location: Granby,QC,Canada
|
that is what we call a BOOSTER ! great job looks very sharp.
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 5/15/2013 Posts: 222 Location: Netherlands
|
Silver Fern wrote:You do put alot of faith in those plastic Pennant Lines dont you That's what I'm thinking too - especially with that kind of outreach! I recommend the brass pendants from YCC. They are expensive, but then you do get something
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 9/22/2007 Posts: 5,860 Location: Louisville
|
Yeah I plan on getting them at some point, it would just be 1 kit at a time, like buy the crane kit now, wait few months, buy luffing kit, wait few months, buy the rest, I will need about 10 extension kits now, 4 for the extensions I already have and the rest for the booster. It's very expensive for all that!
Brandon my youtube channelMy Facebook Page
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 12/13/2005 Posts: 1,321 Location: Latrobe,Pa.
|
Very nice. Impressive. Might be obvious but is the glue used working well esp. With aluminum? I haven't used that glue before esp. for models.
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 9/22/2007 Posts: 5,860 Location: Louisville
|
Yes it works great, strong as steel once dry! Just makes a mess when wet and mixed. Alot of sanding was done.
Brandon my youtube channelMy Facebook Page
|
|
Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Member
Joined: 5/15/2013 Posts: 222 Location: Netherlands
|
cranedude07 wrote:I will need about 10 extension kits now You can make that a lot less My crane has one boom extension, and I got it fully rigged with luffer now, see the pic. I bought the crane and luffer pendants sets, and one boom extension pendants set. As it appeared, the crane and luffer sets contain more than enough pendant bars. I put in more bars than originally with the Conrad pendants, to lessen the angle between the luffers - and I still have 8 bars left, which equals one boom extension set! So that makes at least one boom extension set less if you rig the crane with the luffer. And a lot less if you rig the crane without the luffer, with a straight boom! Counting the bars in your pics here with the boom booster, you need 36 - for that, you need no more than I got, since I built in 34 plus 2 half ones and have 8 bars left (not counting derrick, superlift and all special pendants in both your and my crane)
|
|
Guest |