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One crane - two different SWLs by two different lifting engineers. Is this common?
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Posted By JWG
Dear all,
One of the recently inspected swing arm cranes that was given an SWL of 1.5 tonnes, has been re-inspected by a different lifting engineer and he has given it a SWL of 1 tonne.
Both companies have declared that their results are correct and the original company has backed that up in writing. Before I go down various complaint routes, I'm just wondering if this is common, or has someone grossly made an error? There are an other 20 cranes that may need re-testing as a result.
Many thanks
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Posted By Robert K Lewis
I think strictly you have to accept the latest inspection. The original company will simply insist they were right at the time of test. It is a bit like the MOT - you cannot win the argument
Bob
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Posted By Mitch
Agree with Bob on the aspect of 2 companies 2 results however, you start off by saying 1 crane "inspected" leading to 20 being "re-tested" if 1 inspection is going to lead to 20 tests have the original crane tested to determine the SWL and potentially save the cost of a further 19 tests.
Mitch
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Rank: Guest
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Posted By William
Lloyds supply my workplace with insurance for the cranes and from what i know they also say how much it can lift. I would contact whoever supplies your liability insurance to find out more. The reason why you may have had different swl by different engineers could be that one noticed a defect that the other did not and decided to derate the swl to take this into account.
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Posted By Barry Cooper
William
If the engineer had detected a defect that warranted a reduction in the SWL then it should be highlighted in his report
Barry
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Posted By David A Cooper
As an engineer surveyor I have to take the crane manufacturers SWL as the actual one. I wouldnt derate the crane unless I could apply some quantum that made the new SWL a guaranteed safe load. Most detected defects would render the crane out of service rather than derating. I suspect that you may have a situation where the crane is affected by something else for example if it is an overhead crane and the track has a swl then the crane swl is the track swl MINUS the crane weight etc etc...Dave
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Rank: Guest
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Posted By GeoffB4
Just learnt something. Thanks Dave for the insight.
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One crane - two different SWLs by two different lifting engineers. Is this common?
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