I did some work on Mr. Crane, more pics in my photo album. Now you can stand and ride on it (maybe I'll even add a chair). The driving switches are both together in one box, so it's easier to go forward, backward, steer, or slew the boom. You can install the smaller front wheels that I got to make it easier to get under a bumper and use this machine as an off-road engine hoist (I pulled the Chrysler's engine out in the back yard with it), or install the boom extension and hook up the electric hoist. This is handy if you have a lot of stuff to raise and lower quickly (like when you're cleaning up your yard and you want the furniture and the propane grill gone, or you want to lift bundles of shingles or buckets of coating onto your roof). To balance the load, you fold down the tow bar and stand on it, and you can actually drive it around that way (it's fun, especially to slew around in circles). You have to be careful not to hit anything, though, because this thing is as long as a car when it's fully extended. It uses two electric drive wheels in the middle, and four more outside wheels are on casters. I welded extra brackets on for the bigger, heavier wheels, and the winch brackets. The heavier and further forward the load is, the further you stand back to balance it. I just rewound one of the drive couplings because it was slipping, and two of the winches weren't working because I left him out in the rain, but it's all fixed. Oh, I mentioned a tow bar. You can declutch the drive wheels, and tow it around at 10-15 mph, as long as you're careful. It moves kind of slowly when you're riding on it, or picking up the back end of a car and moving it (yeah, it will do that), but if you're pulling an engine out, or pulling a load that can swing, you want to move it slowly to get it positioned. It can pull itself onto a trailer or up the ramps into a pickup truck too. Maybe I should patent this machine...for somebody like me who isn't supposed to lift anything. Oh, I mentioned the folding tow bar. If you remove the boom extension (just remove one bolt and slide it out), it folds up to the same size as the original folding engine hoist that I made it from. Every accessory that I added, I made sure that it wouldn't interfere with anything that originally folded. Here are the pics...they're in an album too.
Hop On!
Pretty easy to drive, takes some practice to steer.
This is with the short extension on, and that damned grill that I hate, which I'm going to drive to the dumpster. I'm going to make a long extension boom with a bridge on the top for strength, and a 4-way block and tackle, since I have plenty of winch cable. If you remove the extension, slide in and lower the boom, fold up the legs and the trailer hitch, the whole machine is only about 3' long.
-denise
Hop On!
Pretty easy to drive, takes some practice to steer.
This is with the short extension on, and that damned grill that I hate, which I'm going to drive to the dumpster. I'm going to make a long extension boom with a bridge on the top for strength, and a 4-way block and tackle, since I have plenty of winch cable. If you remove the extension, slide in and lower the boom, fold up the legs and the trailer hitch, the whole machine is only about 3' long.
-denise
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