Equipment focus
equipment focus
Taking a Load Off A manufacturer of material handling equipment offers advice and techniques for unloading barges safely and efficiently.
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nloading a river barge can vary greatly from port to port. The size of the terminal, the type of material handling equipment available and attitude of the workers can all make a difference in the efficient movement of material off of a barge. Equipment configurations and maintenance also play a part in productivity as does the training of the crane operator. With so many factors at play, Waterways Today decided to get advice from a material handling manufacturer that specializes in such a task. E-Crane International USA, Galion, Ohio, has approximately 65 of its material handling machines in operation throughout North and South America. The company’s president, Mark Osborne, estimates 50 of those specialty-built cranes are at work on the inland waterways. Osborne answered some questions for Waterways Today about effective barge unloading. Waterways Today (WT): Unloading bulk materials such as coal, fertilizer, grain or aggregate from a barge can be done using a variety of material handling equipment. Can you detail what types of machines are available for this type of job when performing this task at a river terminal? Mark Osborne (MO): To unload barges, there is a wide range of machines from the traditional pendant supported rope crane with a clamshell bucket to the more specialized gantry cranes with a rope-supported bucket that travels out to the barge, is raised and trolleys back to a gantry hopper. More recently, hydraulic excavators are being converted to material handlers. This type of 30
Waterways Today
January-February 2013
material handler is a production-built digging machine equipped with a longer boom and stick with a hydraulic bucket at the end. Our line of material handling equipment has several variations which are designed specifically for barge and ship unloading. They are designed to be repetitive-motion machines that cycle 24/7. The bulk of our machines are stationary cranes. They can stand on a river cell, situated on four outrigger legs or on a straight bolted column. (WT): How do material handlers work with other equipment to unload barges, and which equipment configurations are the most effective? (MO): On the inland waterways, the most productive approach is a single stationary crane on a river cell with adjacent cells to form a wharf line. Barges are positioned using haul winches that pull the barge upriver or downriver into position for unloading. The E-Crane barge-haul system consists of two opposed winches—one forward, one trailing (upstream/downstream)—that work in tandem with a continuous steel cable that includes two master links with a hitch rope for tying to the material barge. The barge can be secured against drifting away from the river cell or dock face by a continuous bargebreasting cable. This is the fastest and safest way to handle and offload a barge.
Edited By Kristin Smith
An operator is like the captain of a boat or the pilot of an aircraft; it is his responsibility to know where his deckhands are at all times.
(WT): What preparations need to be made to the terminal before material can be unloaded from an arriving barge? (MO): The tug boat will bring the material barge to the dock line and one deckhand from the tug and one on the dock will atWaterwaysTodayOnline.com
WaterwaysTodayOnline.com
January-February 2013
Waterways Today
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