XCMG Machinery Sends Tower Crane to Serve Mega-Scale Bridge Construction Project
XCMG Machinery sent off the second unit of
XGT15000-600S, a tower crane jointly developed by XCMG and China Railway Major
Bridge Engineering, from its smart manufacturing base in Xuzhou, China. It will
serve in the construction project of Changtai Yangtze River Bridge, a
diamond-type cable-stayed bridge.
The XGT15000-600S is a super large tower
crane designed and customized to accommodate mega-scale bridge construction
projects. The first unit, which officially rolled off the assembly line in
June, was deployed to the Chao-Ma railway bridge project of the Ma’anshan
Yangtze River Bridge (including railway and highway). The second unit, now
being delivered to the Changtai Yangtze River Bridge, will complete a series of
steel tower hoisting and installation tasks, including lifting maximum weights
of 300 tons to heights of more than 300 meters.
“XCMG’s tower cranes have conquered the
world’s top technical bottlenecks, and we’re now delivering tower cranes of over
1,000-plus tonne-meters in batches that are widely adopted in the constructions
of bridges, power plants, stadiums and super high-rise buildings,” Yuan
Shaozhen, general manager of XCMG’s Tower Crane, said.
Developed on XCMG’s S series tower crane
technology platform, the XGT15000-600S has a rated lifting moment of 15,000tm,
maximum lifting weight of 600 tons and maximum lifting height of more than 400
meters. The super tower crane has more than 60 core technology breakthroughs
and has achieved 10 world firsts and set 10 world records.
The tower crane adopts the combined design
of a flat head main tower, boom auxiliary tower and manned elevator. It also
achieved level 12 typhoon resistance in a non-working state.
“XCMG will continue to promote independent
R&D and tackle core technologies to bring more pioneering super-scale tower
crane products that meets the increasing demand of large-scale construction
projects,” Mi Chenghong, assistant to the general manager of XCMG’s Tower
Crane, said.