@@KriegerDelfin24 And also it was on load testing where it "failed". I think it is better to have this type "failure" at testing.. than lifting something what is not that easy to fix anymore.
A little comparison of the crane before and after would be nice. Liebherr has made some changes to the design to make it more resilient. It would be great for you to show them demonstrating what you have learned and the expertise involved. It has to be sure that some of these innovations would improve designs everywhere.
Hello, thanks for your comment. We have published the entire story on a special website. Please feel free to have a look at it. www.liebherr.com/en/deu/magazine/hlc/hlc.html
This project was the second major operation for the HLC 295000 in mid-2022, installing a substation for the 500 MW Fécamp offshore wind farm off the north-west coast of France. In total, two large components were installed, a 1,300 tonnes jacket, as well as the 2,200 tonnes topside. The Fécamp offshore wind farm will generate electricity equivalent to the power needs of more than 770,000 people.
Is this the crane that has been used to erect wind turbines near Bornholm this summer? I saw one in Rønne harbour that was strikingly similar to it, but my photos are taken from too far away, so I can't say for sure whether it was the same or just a very similar one. In any case, it was gigantic!
Dear MrAstrojensen, that’s totally right. At the Arcadis Ost 1 wind farm in the German Baltic Sea, the HLC 295000 was used to install 28 monopile foundations. Best regards, Liebherr Maritime Cranes
Cool crane, nice short video. But I don't like you act like nothing happend before. If this crane "comes in the right time" you mean "two years too late"? Come on Liebherr, you are bigger then one failure, but I would have prefered if you would have just told by a few words that your first try failed.
Many thanks for your comment. Of course, we are not acting like nothing has happened. We have even published the entire story on a special website. Please feel free to have a look at it. www.liebherr.com/en/deu/magazine/hlc/hlc.html
Dear Tau1s, Many thanks for your comment. Of course, we are not acting like nothing has happened. We have even published the entire story on a special website. Please feel free to have a look at it. www.liebherr.com/en/deu/magazine/hlc/hlc.html
Dear @Kpraveenhere, thanks for your comment. To keep it short and simple: The usual counterweight on this crane and the Orion is managed via the filling and emptying of the ballast tanks, depending on whether the load is being picked up or set down.
Clearly you haven't looked properly into what happened and have only watched the video...The hook which was manufactured by an external company failed...Not any liebherr parts
Thanks for your comment. Of course, we are not acting like nothing has happened. We have even published the entire story on a special website. Please feel free to have a look at it. www.liebherr.com/en/deu/magazine/hlc/hlc.html
This crane deserves its own documentary
We'd like to see documentaries/how it's made or longer versions. This is Fascinating stuff!
Me too
Me too
Me too
Me too
More and longer videos, please!
So happy to see this monster finally rise again! Good job liebherr, show them that you learn and improve from failure!
It was a hook failure that was made by a different vendor.
So this is a rebuild of the one that had the little "whoopsie-doodle?"
Yes
yes, funny how they don't mention that
@@BatteryAcid777 Why would they, it's not very good marketing.
I doubt that they would deny it if you asked about it
@@BatteryAcid777 it was not the fault of liebherr but the fault of the Hook manufacturer,
@@KriegerDelfin24 And also it was on load testing where it "failed".
I think it is better to have this type "failure" at testing.. than lifting something what is not that easy to fix anymore.
Proud to be a part of Liebherr!
A little comparison of the crane before and after would be nice. Liebherr has made some changes to the design to make it more resilient. It would be great for you to show them demonstrating what you have learned and the expertise involved. It has to be sure that some of these innovations would improve designs everywhere.
I don’t think it is that complex. They added a structure on the tower that keeps the crane arm from going over vertical.
Glad to see its back after the hook failure!
Always make sure the lifting hook is tested beyond its capacity before install on such a beautiful crane.
Seems like a good idea to have the hook tested in a manner where failure would be less expensive and not lead to extensive repairs and delays.
Hopefully the hook is keeping up this time. Would be nice to see this crane help the power transition away from gas.
isnt this crane the one that failed ?
Round 2 .... and technically the block (not made by Liebherr) failed, not the crane.
First version installed with Turkish cheap cables felt down a few hundred meters from my location and it was a disaster.
Glad no one got hurt
Надеюсь поставщика главного крюка заменили
Is this the crane that failed during a test? What was the reason for the failure and what broke that caused it to fail? I'd be curious to know.
Hello, thanks for your comment. We have published the entire story on a special website. Please feel free to have a look at it. www.liebherr.com/en/deu/magazine/hlc/hlc.html
Unreal 🤯 😍 heard something like this working off the coast of 🇮🇪 at wind farm but can’t find pictures of it😢
Wonderful
So, this time without a crash?
ruclips.net/video/o1s79Uk10TA/видео.html
Any video of the crash ?
完成おめでとう🎉活躍を期待してます!
apakah ini crane yang waktu itu insiden sling putus?
What project was the top site and jacket part of? Very possible we made the jacket
This project was the second major operation for the HLC 295000 in mid-2022, installing a substation for the 500 MW Fécamp offshore wind farm off the north-west coast of France.
In total, two large components were installed, a 1,300 tonnes jacket, as well as the 2,200 tonnes topside. The Fécamp offshore wind farm will generate electricity equivalent to the power needs of more than 770,000 people.
Is this the crane that has been used to erect wind turbines near Bornholm this summer? I saw one in Rønne harbour that was strikingly similar to it, but my photos are taken from too far away, so I can't say for sure whether it was the same or just a very similar one. In any case, it was gigantic!
Dear MrAstrojensen,
that’s totally right. At the Arcadis Ost 1 wind farm in the German Baltic Sea, the HLC 295000 was used to install 28 monopile foundations.
Best regards,
Liebherr Maritime Cranes
Isn't that the crane that had an accident in Rostock?
Yes
super strong
Cool crane, nice short video.
But I don't like you act like nothing happend before. If this crane "comes in the right time" you mean "two years too late"? Come on Liebherr, you are bigger then one failure, but I would have prefered if you would have just told by a few words that your first try failed.
Many thanks for your comment. Of course, we are not acting like nothing has happened. We have even published the entire story on a special website. Please feel free to have a look at it. www.liebherr.com/en/deu/magazine/hlc/hlc.html
@@LiebherrGroup so that is a pair of whiplash shock absorbers up there on top now? that is a fair solution for minimizing damages i think.
@@LiebherrGroup Hi can you tell me have you had any other hook failures ?
That is incredible.
Fishing rod is fixed and good as new. Never use cheap fishing weights
So are we just not going to talk about the ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM?!
Why not more tech content and not just the marketing stuff
5000t lift capacity. Unreal
How about we get the video titled “fall of the 1st titan”?
why didn't you mention the time the hole crane collapsed during a overload test?
Dear Tau1s, Many thanks for your comment. Of course, we are not acting like nothing has happened. We have even published the entire story on a special website. Please feel free to have a look at it. www.liebherr.com/en/deu/magazine/hlc/hlc.html
Is that same crane where "chinese high quality" hook failed?
yes, but i think they built a new arm (the big red and white thingie)
How long before you break this one ??
someone at Liebherr is till chained up in the basement as a punishment for that little whoopsie
There's about 15 seconds of actual information in this video.
Diese vielen Bilderwechsel sind furchtbar. Fenster schließen.
Where are counterweight
There are no counterweights
Dear @Kpraveenhere, thanks for your comment. To keep it short and simple: The usual counterweight on this crane and the Orion is managed via the filling and emptying of the ballast tanks, depending on whether the load is being picked up or set down.
断臂王
😲
Just like the energy transition building a decent crane in one go, which isn’t rocket science, also appears to be very challenging…
zepsul sie w 2020
This is great news. Now the dickheads hanging around my crane can piss off the next biggest thing.
Can yall put a bucket on it to mine coal?
I love LIEBHERR cranes. The older ones I can remember from the Iran, where many leftists were pulled up into the sky.
this is the one that failed massively ,check it out on youtube wow
The crane itself failed because of slings on the load snapped, 5000+ tonn downforce suddenly gone does that to any crane...
@@isaksundrapp no slings snapped nor was it 5000 tons. Hook from external supplier broke at 2600ton during process of full load test.
Not the crane failed. Be better informed
@martyn hanna
Clearly you haven't looked properly into what happened and have only watched the video...The hook which was manufactured by an external company failed...Not any liebherr parts
Sadly no word about the failure in Rostock...
Thanks for your comment. Of course, we are not acting like nothing has happened. We have even published the entire story on a special website. Please feel free to have a look at it. www.liebherr.com/en/deu/magazine/hlc/hlc.html