Posts tagged ‘forestry trucks’

Though originally designed for use in orchards, bucket trucks, also known as “cherry pickers” are today used in a wide variety of industries. Government agencies, rescue workers and private companies use these trucks on a daily basis for lifting and lowering workers to places too tall for ladders. Common uses include servicing telephone, cable television and electrical equipment on utility poles, mining, construction, exterior painting, and sometimes by tree trimmers to work safely in un-climbable trees. Workers even hang Christmas light displays and banners using bucket trucks. In fact, we see them along roadsides and on construction projects nearly every day.

Bucket trucks make some occupations much safer and easier. Fire trucks and window washers sometimes use bucket trucks as a substitute for ladders, reducing the risks associated with ladders wobbling, slipping and throwing the worker to the ground. Other life saving uses includes implementation in the electrical industry. When working with high voltage power lines, there is always a risk of electrical shock. But when using a cherry picker, the rubber tires can insulate the truck and operator from the ground in case of contact with a high voltage power lines. Continue reading ‘Different uses for Bucket trucks’ »

One of the most useful and planet changing inventions of all time is the crane. Originally invented by the ancient Greeks and powered by men or donkeys, cranes were used to help build some of the most fascinating structures in ancient Athens. Eventually men and donkeys were replaced with steam engines, and then internal combustion engines or electric motors and hydraulic systems were finally added.

Since those first rudimentary inventions, both cranes and architecture have come a long way. Nowadays cranes come in a wide range of sizes for use in many industries. From jib cranes, used in doors in workshops to tower cranes, used in the construction of sky scrapers to floating cranes, used on oil rigs, you could say these aren’t your grandpa’s type of cranes. Continue reading ‘History of the Crane Truck’ »