Here's a closer look at the rear of the superstructure of this magnificent
crane model by Thomas Kelly. The model was built for a company (Goettle
Corp.)
out of Cincinnati,
Ohio for
a crane
operator
that was
retiring
and
the company
wanted to
present
him with a model of the crane he had operated for many years. The crane
is a Link-Belt LS338 100 ton crawler with a "Swinging Leads" piledriving
attachment. The crane was built by using the Kibri Liebherr 883 crawler
as a base. Goettle furnished many pictures of the real machine including
detail shots of the boom and crane body. It is numbered for the actual
crane the gentleman operated. Thomas used the tracks "as is" since
the measurements were almost identical. The crane body is sheet styrene
laminated to
parts of the Kibri kit to reproduce the LS338 shape. The drums are
nonfunctional since they wanted a 4 drum system like the real one in
a waterfall configuration. The boom and mast were modified to replicate
the LS338 system from the Kibri kit parts and the counterweight was
built from 28 separate pieces of styrene to look like the real one.
Two Sheepscot piledriving kits were modified to produce the swinging
leads type of piledriving rig. Hammer was modified from Sheepscot kit
to look like the photos that Goettle provided. Thomas used a real piece
of the crane that they sent to replicate the paint color and custom
decals
to letter it. The Model is mounted on a small base with scenery to
look like some of the photos. The company reported that the gentleman
was
very
impressed when he received it and several others at the party asked
where their crane was.
All told, it took over 100 hours to build this baby. Also shown in Photo
Gallery 186 and 189.
Posted April 5, 2004 |
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