How not to Demolish a crane Australia (Nasty)

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • A portal/gantry crane being demolished the wrong way

Komentáře • 853

  • @mglsp
    @mglsp Před 14 lety +13

    That was beautiful.
    I guess they don't hire engineers in Australia for demolition projects.
    I especially liked the cylinder valve beating forklift operator, he really set the tone for things to come.

  • @cokaneds
    @cokaneds Před 8 lety +241

    That's what happens when you hire people who don't have the Koalafications.

    • @harryandruschak2843
      @harryandruschak2843 Před 8 lety +12

      +|| Co-Kane || Good pun, hard to bear, tho.

    • @jackfrost2146
      @jackfrost2146 Před 8 lety +13

      +|| Co-Kane || The guys underneath would have been well and truly kangarooted.

    • @blueocean1152
      @blueocean1152 Před 8 lety +1

      +|| Co-Kane || qualifications...... :)

    • @Len_M.
      @Len_M. Před 8 lety +9

      +fire blade You need to pay more attention to collapsed threads. Don't make others do the heavy lifting so you get a joke.

    • @blueocean1152
      @blueocean1152 Před 8 lety

      i did it my friend i suggest the same to you do not dealing with the comments..but with the content of video

  • @johnferguson7235
    @johnferguson7235 Před 8 lety +52

    Anyone with even a fundamental knowledge of structures and structural stability would know that the beam connecting the two legs was a tension tie holding the two legs in position. As the video clearly shows, when you cut through that tension member the structure loses all stability and collapses. These people have absolutely no business attempting this type of work. This is not an accident, it's idiocy.

    • @petrinaelliott8630
      @petrinaelliott8630 Před 3 lety +4

      they had two 100ton excavators to hold Aframe together with massive steel cables... one of the excavators broke down so they used a 65ton excavator on one of the cables...you saw what happened next ....trust me ..I was there..dickhead engineers .... guy in the boom lift never worked there again.. boomlift was squashed

    • @blackwalnutmintyfukkenchew5928
      @blackwalnutmintyfukkenchew5928 Před rokem

      You get that on them big jobs, damage is cool and being lucky enough to live through the bullshit is even better. Cool stories to tell later

  • @974missinglink
    @974missinglink Před 10 lety +68

    You could tell it wasn't going to end well right from the start. The wanker on the forklift "spearing" the valve ends of the oxygen tanks when they fell over was a pretty good indicator!! :)

  • @LorddGray
    @LorddGray Před 8 lety +25

    "I'm just going to cut through this beam which forms a triangle with the legs. What could possibly go wrong?"

    • @RyanthebadMeatball
      @RyanthebadMeatball Před 7 lety +1

      lmao, the fact that no one objected the idea though!!

    • @LorddGray
      @LorddGray Před 7 lety +2

      Ryan Costa Yeah, always a good idea to have at least one smart person on site to say, "Let's think this through for a second!"

    • @RyanthebadMeatball
      @RyanthebadMeatball Před 7 lety

      Lmao the guy recording prob knew it was coming too!

    • @getl0st
      @getl0st Před 7 lety

      This is like skiing down a very steep slope that's covered in deep snow and then acting all surprised when you trigger an avalanche...

  • @SirLaughalot123
    @SirLaughalot123 Před 10 lety +46

    if i had a dollar for every pixel in this video, i would have 71 cents

    • @johnnysno5054
      @johnnysno5054 Před 6 lety +1

      Sir Smokealot "Potato camera" !

    • @firewatch814
      @firewatch814 Před 6 lety

      Somebody likes being on high horses.

    • @joandar1
      @joandar1 Před 6 lety

      If I had a Dollar for every bit of Common (Cents) Sense displayed by the crew doing the demolition work then I would still be broke! John, Australia.

    • @Leatherface123.
      @Leatherface123. Před 4 lety

      I’d have .69 cents

  • @Bodhi594
    @Bodhi594 Před 8 lety +66

    How about the clown picking up the torch bottles? This company was just flat out unsafe and it finally caught up to them.

    • @dougankrum3328
      @dougankrum3328 Před 7 lety +6

      yeah....always lift with a strap or chain...especially something like a rack of high-pressure cylinders....

    • @MrJimbaloid
      @MrJimbaloid Před 7 lety +8

      Especially as the bottle cage HAD straps already round it. God sake you don't poke live bottles with forks. What a bunch of amateurs.

    • @bluecollarcanuck
      @bluecollarcanuck Před 6 lety +5

      Yeah, that was literally painful to watch.

    • @alainarchambault2331
      @alainarchambault2331 Před 3 lety

      Wondered how many valves he could've knocked off, yeah.

  • @stronzer59
    @stronzer59 Před 6 lety +2

    and the Darwin award for 2008 goes to clowns with gas axe knocking down crane supervised by experts in Clown suits.

  • @RollingEasy
    @RollingEasy Před 9 lety +46

    I'm an Aussie and have spent enough years in steel construction which was not much different from steel demolition in fact. An honest answer here is that most of the workers would have been too pissweak to speak up and to say 'Stop this shit'. And second I'll bet my gonads that the person running this circus would have been a 'Bigmouth' who easily had everyone follow him because the easiest way you do that, is by making anyone who wants to THINK FOR THEMSELVES look like a wimp in the eyes of everyone else. (That's their biggest weakness). So all are too timid and don't want to take the risk at looking like a girl, even if that means saving lives. I've been on jobs where steel and gear is falling from above but if you tie stuff off, the bigmouths and boofheads snigger "Wod are ya"?

    • @RollingEasy
      @RollingEasy Před 8 lety +4

      +mspenrice Hillbillies the bloody lot of them....... Somebody should be in gaol for these very practices. I'll say my opinion again that my own experiences tell me that its a 'big mouth' at the back pushing ordinary men along. And for far too long they've used the bullying tactic of calling any person who talks safety, a wimp and a 'girl'. Its all push push push until someone gets hurt or killed. From a boy to a grown man, I spent 29yrs and 6 months watching my own Father sitting at home every single day hardly able to move and with permanent brain damage. He was a rigger on steel construction and paid the price for these stupid types of practices. Coming home in one piece at the end of every day is far more important than than any job and you are more important a person than the 'Cowboy' who thinks he can push men into putting their lives on the line..... Fuck that!

    • @mspenrice
      @mspenrice Před 8 lety

      With any luck, someone actually is.

    • @barthchris1
      @barthchris1 Před 8 lety +5

      +Tom Tee,
      You might feel a little better to know that it's not just Australia that has problems like this. It may be that its, not that people don't want to think for themselves, it's that they just don't give a fuck. I think they derive a certain pleasure from watching the big mouthed guy in charge screw up. Either way, it's not right.
      I'm an electrician and when I was on a job with a loud-mouthed, ego driven, my way or the highway type foreman, the job always has bad moral and it causes all sorts of problems, I dreaded even showing up. On a job with a foreman that treats his men with respect, the guys will go above and beyond for him. How these bad foreman stay employed is beyond me, but they do, they are very good at deceiving their higher ups and deflecting the blame.
      Now, when I run jobs, I remember what it was like on jobs with a bad boss, that barking/belittling people gets you nowhere. I'd be happy if someone pointed out something unsafe, they are only making my life easier only fucked up people would ridicule someone for doing that! If my project manager tries to speed things up without giving me the proper resources/manpower he can screw off! Especially if he tries to get us to work an excessive amount of overtime, yes the money is nice but doing 5-6/10-12 hr days for weeks on end is ridiculous, production, moral, and safe work practices/carelessness go way down. Some people, especially younger guys love it but IMO it's just not worth it. Treat people as you would like to be treated, it's a simple but effective rule to follow.

    • @RollingEasy
      @RollingEasy Před 8 lety

      +Chris Barth You are absolutely correct on every single count. On every thing you have said. Very well written.

    • @dougankrum3328
      @dougankrum3328 Před 7 lety +1

      You're quite right about the long hours....the body may go the 12 hour days for weeks on end...but the mental clarity goes bad after 8-9 hours.....I was working on a Bio-Mass power-plant as mechanic/welder a few years ago.....12 hours a day 6 days a week for 6 months (if you were in the middle of a repair at your 12 hours...you stayed until it was done)....some days were from 7AM until waaaay past mid-night....and of course return tomorrow (or later this morning) at 7AM.....later...when I had time to visit my friends....they said...."You looked 1/2 dead when you were working that job".....

  • @xtusvincit5230
    @xtusvincit5230 Před 6 lety +5

    When demolishing something monumental, always start at the bottom.

  • @jjj5647
    @jjj5647 Před 10 lety +4

    No One was killed in this accident. The man doing the welding fell under neath a steel beam that bent and buckled and this saved his life as the buckle was exactly above him protecting him. Very good video - well done. Amazing to see how quickly it came down leaving no time to escape and the danger of that a work place can entrail. I think this is a very dangerous way to take the crane down - you gotto be mad to be doing what they attempted.

  • @riparianlife97701
    @riparianlife97701 Před 10 lety +52

    Camera operator had one job.

    • @gspot65hotmaildotcom
      @gspot65hotmaildotcom Před 10 lety +10

      I agree, sack the camerdude ffs!

    • @signal44
      @signal44 Před 10 lety +12

      1500 feet away and he ducks and hides.... tisk.... tisk....tisk

    • @geirtwo
      @geirtwo Před 10 lety +10

      Good point, why even by a camera if you are going to videotape the ground when action happens.

    • @GaryBeilby
      @GaryBeilby Před 10 lety +3

      Ever been filming in that situation?

    • @dlowery51
      @dlowery51 Před 9 lety

      Bloody hell right, mate! Bloody hell right!

  • @AdmiralBob
    @AdmiralBob Před rokem +1

    I also appreciate all the surplus personel in the danger area for the vital task of wandering and staring at the one guy doing work....

  • @coldgold49
    @coldgold49 Před 9 lety +15

    i bet the guy in the forklift was still trying to knock off those cylinder valves with his forks after the collapse. this should be a training film or a new 10 stooges movie

    • @firewatch814
      @firewatch814 Před 6 lety

      mike daytona the three stooges actually would have started cutting at the top.

  • @johnnysnow1172
    @johnnysnow1172 Před 9 lety +43

    Let me just stand under this crane while i cut it's support beam...

    • @348frank348
      @348frank348 Před 8 lety +6

      "it's not like gravity has any effect on behemoth steel cranes anyways"

    • @rocketraccoon1976
      @rocketraccoon1976 Před 8 lety +14

      He had his helmet on. What more do you want?

    • @Halberdin
      @Halberdin Před 6 lety +1

      And he found just the perfect spot to speed up the job by days. I guess he (or rather his heirs) got a nice bonus.

    • @AmbientWarrior
      @AmbientWarrior Před 6 lety +1

      I don't think they watched enough CZcams.

  • @TyphoonVstrom
    @TyphoonVstrom Před 8 lety +64

    This is what happens when the cheapest contractor wins the bid. No site discipline, ridiculous plan to cut the structure.
    Too cheap to hire a crane and do the job safely.....the crane would have been a maximum of $2k for the entire day, so management are telling you this guy's life was worth $2k to them.
    Speak up, say no and let management eat their profits.

    • @grom7826
      @grom7826 Před 8 lety +3

      +Sideslip Yea they don't even have 3' demo torches so he can stay away from the hot work.

    • @garryclelland4481
      @garryclelland4481 Před 8 lety +3

      +Sideslip you have nailed it , well said

    • @sanjayw9878
      @sanjayw9878 Před 7 lety +1

      well said

    • @dougankrum3328
      @dougankrum3328 Před 7 lety

      ...somewhere there's a video on CZcams of tear-down of a big hoist/crane like this...Netherlands or somewhere.........start at the top, 2-3 cranes for support.....remove all ...piece by piece.....no accidents....crane was then moved to Korea and re assembled.....

    • @duradim1
      @duradim1 Před 6 lety +3

      You can't rent a crane big enough to do the job for $2K a day.

  • @BMPWR
    @BMPWR Před 11 lety +3

    Thanks for a great video! I was scared almost the whole time after seeing the fork lift with the compressed cylinders!

  • @flemwad
    @flemwad Před 9 lety +53

    omg it was so obvious what was going to happen. These clowns would cut a branch off a tree while sitting on it

    • @adrianwarner8686
      @adrianwarner8686 Před 9 lety

      flemwad Pretty sure somebody did that once. I think they found the body three blocks away.....

    • @adrianwarner8686
      @adrianwarner8686 Před 9 lety +2

      flemwad Found it, happened here in the UK. We win darwin awards too....
      darwinawards.com/darwin/darwin1994-21.html

    • @matthewguttormson9424
      @matthewguttormson9424 Před 8 lety

      darwin better be on North sentinel island cause he deserves to live there

  • @jamesbakker9303
    @jamesbakker9303 Před 10 lety +3

    That's where all the trouble starts ..... Down under :D
    Like sitting on a branch, and cutting off the tree.

  • @dannwr7715
    @dannwr7715 Před 10 lety +11

    From the beginning of the soldering I kept thinking "do you really want to weaken a structure like that".

    • @edwardjonez6615
      @edwardjonez6615 Před 10 lety +5

      "SOLDERING?" Are you daft?

    • @donnygrungerson473
      @donnygrungerson473 Před 10 lety +4

      Edward Jonez lol. You can't know what you don't know. lol

    • @timlad5
      @timlad5 Před 10 lety

      Edward Jonez Some countries its called soldering and others its called welding. Yes I know they are cutting but it uses the same principle.

    • @edwardjonez6615
      @edwardjonez6615 Před 10 lety +2

      NOT EXACTLY. Soldering is a fabrication or repair method. You heat metal by many different means, apply solder and some sort of flux material. Gas welding is done nearly the same way, usually without a flux. In electric welding, a solid flux is coated to the electrode or gas or powder flux is used. This process along with 'soldering' is used to bond two or more bits of metal together.
      The demolition of this crane has nothing to do with "soldering" what so ever. In "cutting" up scrap steel, one uses a flammable gas, CNG LNG, LPG, butane, acetylene or another 'cutting' mixture, along with pure oxygen to heat the steel. Once it reaches it's critical melting point, high pressure oxygen stream is introduced through a hole in the center of the burning tip. 'Cutting' steel is a misnomer as you are actually BURNING up the metal in the kerf by nearly instantaneous oxidation. A really good cut gives off little in the way of sparks. I welcome comments from anyone with more "soldering" facts which I may have inadvertently missed. Thank you. Be safe. Doc

    • @mibars
      @mibars Před 10 lety +1

      timlad5 Seriously? These are completly different processes. Soldering connects two metal parts with different metal that melts at lower temperature than metal being connected that stay solid (imagine trying to "glue" something with water-ice in freezing conditions), welding involves melting connected metal, sometimes even withoud adding any new material to connection (imagine connecting two ice cubes by slightly heating them up and then freezing them again).
      BTW this is neither welding nor soldering in this video, it's just cutting with some sort of a cutting torch.

  • @Durgemonger
    @Durgemonger Před 10 lety +15

    Worst company in the world!
    Why would you attempt to pick up a stillage of oxygen bottles with forks in the valves?

    • @TheNijack
      @TheNijack Před 10 lety +2

      Wow and that major fuck-up was just a side show to what was coming. How does a rack of bottles come to be lying on its side in 1st place? What a bunch of clowns.

    • @fulkthered
      @fulkthered Před 10 lety

      ngaire nordli well let me think on that.he was using a cutting torch, maybe the bottles were there for him to stand on?you know for what he couldnt reach with the lift.or they were spent and they didnt want the crane to fall on them.

    • @sivalley
      @sivalley Před 10 lety +2

      joseph fulks
      Kindly educate yourself on just how high a pressure those OXYGEN bottles are filled to and let me know if you would stand on TOP of a crate of 16 of them when operating a cutting torch. :-) Have a wonderful life!
      PS - That crate probably weighed a good 1500kg.

  • @stevehawking
    @stevehawking Před 14 lety +2

    This is a direct tension failure of the tension strut in the a-frame (as people have previously commented).
    I would be surprised that any engineer would have specified attacking the tie member like this. As everyone has already said, it's unfortunately also pretty obvious.
    They may have been trying to weaken the structure and went too far or possibly miscalculated the load/dynamic effects on the tie member during cutting.
    Would be interesting to see any reports on this.

  • @BigotesMcbuff
    @BigotesMcbuff Před 10 lety +1

    Supervisor comes along: "Have you done your Take 5"?

  • @Yokes27
    @Yokes27 Před 6 lety +4

    meanwhile at 4:56 dudes still trying to pickup the tanks with his forklift...

  • @grizzlycountry1030
    @grizzlycountry1030 Před 3 lety +3

    *That moment when you realize it's everyone's first day on the job and that the company was only founded yesterday.* 🤣

  • @jackfrost2146
    @jackfrost2146 Před 10 lety +6

    They expected a leg which is slanted, to not slide sideways when cut??? Clearly, the bottom horizontal part is in tension between the two legs and the top leg attachment wasn't designed to resist the twisting force from the leverage of the long legs.

  • @digitalbroadcaster
    @digitalbroadcaster Před 9 lety +35

    Cut away the part holding two wheeled platforms together and you'll get the roll-away, followed by the collapse of the main structure falling down into the splaying gap.
    Any one of these should have looked at this and thought "Ummm...if that is cut and that bogey runs that way and this one runs this way, then the crane on top...will....be....falling somehwere in between this struc...GUYS! GUYS! STOP!"

    • @michaelmcneil4168
      @michaelmcneil4168 Před 9 lety +22

      Pretty obvious that the crew was incompetent from the way the forklift handled the gas canisters.

    • @jerryjdawgsworldarnold
      @jerryjdawgsworldarnold Před 9 lety +5

      ummm...common sense is a awesome skill

    • @rocketraccoon1976
      @rocketraccoon1976 Před 8 lety

      +jerry arnold (jdawgsworld) And an expensive one, too. This company screens it out in the interviewing process in order to deliver better value to their customers.

    • @dougankrum3328
      @dougankrum3328 Před 7 lety

      ....Seems pretty obvious......

    • @JasonMasters
      @JasonMasters Před 7 lety

      The key word in your assessment is "thought" since it seems obvious that nobody on that work site did that.

  • @edwardjonez6615
    @edwardjonez6615 Před 9 lety +15

    I stand corrected. According to informed sources, Mr Greg Rees was not killed in this mishap.
    He died about a year later, whilst demolishing the last ore bridge (crane) of several which were torn down at the site. There is no known recording of that event. It would seem after experiencing this catastrophic failure, the company DMX Partners, would change their shoddy practices. Sadly for him they did not. Yes, RIP Brother Union Boiler-maker Greg Rees. Thank you also for the note of appreciation from The Rees family. May God grant you comfort.

  • @70Gajillion
    @70Gajillion Před 9 lety +1

    I moved on, without watching at first. (too apparent) Returned only to read comments. Thank you for being interesting. HAGD

  • @bigredc222
    @bigredc222 Před 9 lety +9

    The guy videoing seems to be on the same page as the demo guys, they think they are going to have to use the excavators to pull the legs apart.
    Any kid that's played with blocks would know those legs were going to spread when the steel holding them together was cut.
    I have to believe they did something like chock the wheels to keep the legs from spreading, but they underestimated the forces, by a lot.
    How could all the guys on that job not know it was going to come down, it's mind boggling.
    If the guy that owns the demo company has to have a license, it should be taken away, they were in way over their head.

  • @locouk
    @locouk Před 8 lety +9

    Cherry picker for sale, used once. Bargain price for fast sale.

  • @HuDaFuK
    @HuDaFuK Před 11 lety +1

    Love how the dude cutting it stops and turns round to his mate just before it goes. Can almost hear him asking, "Are we sure this is gonna be OK?"

  • @dillonwarman7769
    @dillonwarman7769 Před 10 lety +7

    who packed these guys lunches and dressed them

  • @MerchantOfDeath15
    @MerchantOfDeath15 Před 8 lety +1

    The way that forklift dragged over all the valves for those tanks.....Holy fuck thats dangerous.

  • @michaeljohn6526
    @michaeljohn6526 Před 10 lety +6

    wearing a hard hat wont save you from that mess

  • @ericwsmith7722
    @ericwsmith7722 Před 6 lety +1

    And there I thought the fork truck driver was going to get everyone killed handling those acetylene bottles like he was piling up scrap metal .

  • @kenrose9065
    @kenrose9065 Před 9 lety +60

    If brains were dynamite, these clods wouldn't have enough to blow the wax out of their ears!

    • @richardlorych9868
      @richardlorych9868 Před 9 lety +11

      lol, must remember that one!

    • @joandar1
      @joandar1 Před 6 lety

      Another one for you Richard, Would not have enough to blow their Nose!
      John, Australia.
      Sad part is in this case it is true.

  • @gregg4164
    @gregg4164 Před 9 lety +5

    Hopefully the contractor in charge of this disaster is in jail and can put no other worker in danger of his life.

    • @mspenrice
      @mspenrice Před 8 lety

      +gregg4164 ... and the families of those guys who were underneath got the remaining value of the company evenly divided between them.

    • @rocketraccoon1976
      @rocketraccoon1976 Před 8 lety

      +mspenrice No one died in THIS incident. That guy on the cherry picker landed in a spot that a bent girder protected. However, they had another incident after this one which killed one guy & injured four more.

    • @gregg4164
      @gregg4164 Před 8 lety +3

      They should have been put out of business after this incident. they obviously have no regard for safety and whom ever is engineering these projects does not belong in this business.

  • @jamescampbell7780
    @jamescampbell7780 Před 6 lety +1

    In addition to this incident, were the initiators of the project held to account for employing cowboys who clearly must have had problems on previous contracts?

  • @PJMontoya
    @PJMontoya Před 8 lety +3

    I was surprised when they were cutting apart the crane supports and it came down.

    • @44R0Ndin
      @44R0Ndin Před 8 lety +2

      Can't tell if "doesn't know how gravity works" or sarcasm.
      Seriously, there's documented evidence of people that would (and have) cut out the supports of the thing that's supporting them.
      So I'm honestly not sure anymore.
      Oh, now I've made myself sad.
      (last line is Futurama reference, possibly slightly butchered).

  • @glen.mellis5524
    @glen.mellis5524 Před 10 lety +2

    I'm sure of one thing, since I wasn't there I'm not going to give my expert opinion about how they did it wrong.

    • @donnygrungerson473
      @donnygrungerson473 Před 10 lety +2

      They cut from the bottom. The parts that he's cutting are on two separate legs with wheels that go on a train track. When he cuts the support off, they slide outward from the weight of the stuff on top, causing everything to fall. You are supposed to do this starting at the top, taking things down safely instead of this stupid shit. I didn't have to be there to understand how the physics work. lol What they did was retarded and someone should have stopped them.

    • @milldabeast519
      @milldabeast519 Před 10 lety +1

      doesnt take an expert to know that they are cutting short cuts and the proper way is to dismantle it the same way it was built . some cheap fuckers just trying to save a buck and demolish it vs dismantling it the same way it was put together

  • @MrBen527
    @MrBen527 Před 10 lety +2

    This hack outfit obviously had no idea what they were doing.

  • @theprojectmanagementworksh6841

    The guy whom made the video didn't have the balls to give it to Workcover until many months later. This is how much some people value human life !!

  • @michaelmcneil4168
    @michaelmcneil4168 Před 11 lety +1

    I must remember that if I ever get to have a video camera trained on somethjing like that:
    It is always more dramatic to hold it in my hand, not two hands, just one -and preferably with my arm outstretched (whilst scratching my backside with the spare.)

  • @Ingens_Scherz
    @Ingens_Scherz Před rokem

    "Well, it's demolished ain't it? What more d'ya want mate?"

  • @Mancavedweller1
    @Mancavedweller1 Před 10 lety +1

    The minute I started watching this video, I just started thinking what the hell are they doing. It was instantaneously obvious what the outcome would be. Did not one single worker there have the basic mechanical understanding of what would happen once you cut through that crossmember. Surely the "engineers" (ha ha) or whoever must have discussed the best and safest way to do this demo. My brain will forever be boggled at this act.

  • @benjigray8690
    @benjigray8690 Před 3 lety +1

    Little did Sir Isaac Newton realise how much trouble he was unleashing when he invented Gravity.

  • @edwardjonez6615
    @edwardjonez6615 Před 10 lety +1

    HERE IS THE KICKER. Mr. Rees was a union boilermaker. A few months earlier his parents wrote a letter to "Workcover", the government entity responsible for workplace safety in NSW. They expressed their concern because the of way the ore bridges were being demolished. The demo company had used the same method taking down the previous cranes, it fell in nearly the same manner. 3 men were almost crushed. Viewing the video of that incident prompted their letter.

  • @krayzkev
    @krayzkev Před 7 lety +1

    what happened to the man on the fork truck did he manage to lift the gas bottles .

  • @samueljames9342
    @samueljames9342 Před 6 lety +2

    Who the heck engineered this job, anybody knows you start at the top

    • @vrystaat8082
      @vrystaat8082 Před 4 lety

      You're a man who knows.....let's start a demo business...... We can't do worse !!!!! Lol..

  • @fatyowls
    @fatyowls Před 6 lety +1

    That would've passed through an engineering report before demolition, they're normally extremely rigorous, all materials would've been removed Asbestos, and anything flammable. Don't know how they got away with that one..

  • @MagnetOnlyMotors
    @MagnetOnlyMotors Před 5 lety +2

    1:03 wonder why, the forks could have been closer together?
    That guy is an accident waiting to happen!
    3:55 VERY NICE!

  • @loftsatsympaticodotc
    @loftsatsympaticodotc Před 8 lety

    We used an oxy-lance to split 2 two columns of a boring mill ; the 2 columns fell to left and right, torch man was ok. We ALSO split 2 legs of a gantry crane- BUT before you cut the leg brace, MAKE SURE it's supported, OR cable the two TOGETHER, so the cross-brace can be cut apart safely and allow the legs to spread apart S L O W L Y (if so designed- as ours was)- In our case we kept the main bridge up with 140 ton crane... a baby compared to this job! Quelle Tragedie !

  • @robertdeal410
    @robertdeal410 Před 8 lety

    The amount of energy that guy just set off was crazy.

  • @scottchanning2500
    @scottchanning2500 Před 9 lety +1

    They seem completely oblivious to the danger.

  • @isilder
    @isilder Před 13 lety

    The video is about a near miss a year before a fatal accident doing the same job, the demolition of the Newcastle BHP steelworks
    The man who died is .
    Mr Gregory Rees
    2.26 Mr Gregory Rees was killed on 19 September 2002 when he was crushed during the
    demolition of No 6 Ore Bridge at the former Newcastle BHP Steelworks site at Port Waratah.
    Mr Rees was employed by Demtech Pty Ltd.19
    2.27 On 29 July 2003, WorkCover sent a report on the death of Mr Rees to the Newcastle
    Coroner’s Court.

  • @Antipodean33
    @Antipodean33 Před 8 lety +8

    Makes the fork lift drivers accident look mild in comparison. I can't believe this was in Australia, i've always thought we had some of the best health and safety requirements in the world, obviously i'm wrong. Pity the camera man didn't hold his nerve and film it, i'd like to see how that big cherry picker ended up where it did

    • @DaleandShithead
      @DaleandShithead Před 8 lety +3

      +Antipodean33 No Kidding all that build up, to the worst filming ever!

    • @rocketraccoon1976
      @rocketraccoon1976 Před 8 lety +2

      Looks like the bureaucrats at WorkCover, the Australian equivalent of OSHA, didn't bother to train or certify their inspectors in certain specialized fields, and resisted all attempts to correct the matter, and threatened the jobs of their employees when they brought up unsafe working conditions.
      The guy on the picker survived, but later on, there was another demo accident where one person was killed & 4 injured.
      (Workcover Inspectors "Untrained". Broadcast: 30/04/2004 Reporter: Sarah Schofield)

    • @jimbass7867
      @jimbass7867 Před 8 lety +2

      That's why you put the cameras on tripods and leave them the fk alone. Amature ruined what would have been a fantstic piece of evidence and learning tool.

    • @jamesmatthews9906
      @jamesmatthews9906 Před 2 lety +1

      Its all about profit and meeting deadlines. The reality of construction/demolition in Australia is far from what the public realise.

  • @stevied007ytb
    @stevied007ytb Před 13 lety

    Total insanity. I can hardly believe what I just watched. I just cannot get my head around how anyone would even consider demolishing a structure that way.

  • @88mmFlaK
    @88mmFlaK Před 10 lety

    Apparently the fellow doing the torching fell out of the lift and miraculously survived, but there was a fatal accident at this same site later which resulted in the death of a man.

  • @t4thfavor1212
    @t4thfavor1212 Před 13 lety

    How fast did that guy jump out of the boom truck! lol priceless.

  • @jimjardine4705
    @jimjardine4705 Před 10 lety +3

    My God! How dangerous was that!

  • @calzoid71
    @calzoid71 Před 15 lety

    Man! I can't believe that. And that folklift guy too! Gosh. I'm glad I don't have to work with that mob. And how calm was that camera operator!!

  • @alexanderSydneyOz
    @alexanderSydneyOz Před 6 lety +1

    i will say that irrespective of the management's culpability, the guy holding the torch is as good a position as anyone to see what could happen. directing risky operations is bad, but so is actually doing it.

  • @sportsaddict1942
    @sportsaddict1942 Před 10 lety

    The Boss "Say mates lets have a spot of tea before get started on this easy job".

  • @joe-ut7ee
    @joe-ut7ee Před 8 lety +2

    You build from the bottom up and disassemble from the top down. I'm surprised that
    nobody die that day.

  • @petrinaelliott8630
    @petrinaelliott8630 Před 3 lety

    I was there that Day...standing on the wharf...nobody died ..guy cutting the Aframe jumped out of boomlift and landed in a hollow spot left by a bogged frontend loader earlier in the day...engineered demolition....NOT....still gives me nightmares

  • @guntherultraboltnovacrunch5248

    Thank god he was wearing his hard hat.

    • @CobraRedstone
      @CobraRedstone Před 7 lety +1

      I shit you not, thats how safety measures works in Australia

    • @hcrun
      @hcrun Před 7 lety +2

      You are utterly incorrect.
      I was in OH&S (assessment and accident investigation) for more than a decade (retired 2012) and the great majority of industrial accidents, particularly those in construction and heavy industry, are due to the worker *not following safe work procedures*.
      Under legislation in force now - and certainly in force when I was in the profession - every employer must engage in risk management and safe work practice.
      Look at that site: it is literally an accident waiting to happen!
      If no risk assessment was done before work started then those blokes had every *legal* right in the world to refuse duty until an assessment - and then a list of risk management steps - had been done and issued.
      And if they are ignoring procedures that may have been issued then they are also legally at fault.
      My guess is that some cowboy contractor has got the job to demolish that crane and has never heard of the term "risk management".

    • @RomanTezky84
      @RomanTezky84 Před 7 lety

      Yep,I do something similar for living new,here in Czech republic where most ppl are from Ukraine..never saw a construction site before- not easy to make them to respect all the rules we teach them and let them sign rules that they have to follow while on site or using a tower crane 🏗....
      Others do it for over 20years are used to doing it their way and if you come up with any rules then they are pissed...(too slow,too stupid) so on... But hey, that's their choice...no respect..no job...always can go back home and cry about it,- still better then seeing something like this... Forklifter would go home with a nice fat fee for that lifting also....but as a safety/crane coordinator..would stoop it all right away...somebody was missing here or was fucki** his co-worker in the ass while this was going on....
      I m hated until something happens..then respect comes along...
      Take care everyone!

  • @WrencherCB
    @WrencherCB Před 9 lety +3

    What did they think would happen?

  • @2ASTRO
    @2ASTRO Před 9 lety +5

    This is the worst violation of common safety practices and common sense that I have ever seen. The guy in the fork lift is just plain ignorant and it is amazing that half of them didn't die. The work site should have been shut down, vacated and investigated immediately. The company doing the work was obviously completely amateurish and the workers have little safety training.

    • @rocketraccoon1976
      @rocketraccoon1976 Před 8 lety

      The problem was the WorkCover government inspector was equally unqualified to judge the safety of this worksite, because the heads of that agency at the time had their heads up their asses, getting high on their own fumes. (They didn't understand that some of their inspectors needed specialized training, and any staff that brought up unsafe working conditions was threatened with dismissal.)

  • @starbolin
    @starbolin Před 11 lety

    At first I thought he was just cutting the compression legs and I was thinking they were going to let it settle then back off and pull the legs out. Ok, would have made sense. But apparently the tension (cross) member was precut also. This would make the way it fell entirely predictable. Could they not even afford some chain restraints?
    Our local water operator had a somewhat smaller rail crane removed. Due to the difficulty, the removal bill was for more than the original construction.

  • @jack-o4870
    @jack-o4870 Před 11 lety

    Wearing safety harness in EWP would get him killed. Well done, mate!

  • @MrLandscraper
    @MrLandscraper Před 10 lety

    As a contractor who has to deal with OSHA'S redundant regulations I will never complain of said regulations again.

    • @TheRealMrPeach
      @TheRealMrPeach Před 3 lety

      Every regulation is written in blood, as they say.

  • @DrFelonious
    @DrFelonious Před 9 lety +9

    Entire crew was probably on 457 visas!

    • @TyphoonVstrom
      @TyphoonVstrom Před 8 lety

      +DrFelonious Or even worse, sourced through a labour hire company, where all the workers lie and fabricate qualifications.....

  • @epistte
    @epistte Před 14 lety

    I was amazed that there wasn't a fireball when he did that. He could have easily snapped a valve off those cylinders w/ sparks from that action could have ignited the escaping gas.
    This clip should be an OSHA training film of what not to do.

  • @Tom-Lahaye
    @Tom-Lahaye Před 11 lety

    I'm not sure if they guy cutting the cross member jumped out of the basket and got away or got crushed.
    But seeing him torching trough this part my expectation was that the legs would spread out, and this happened, this breakdown could only been managed in a safe way by using a cutting charge on this cross member, as there is now way to dismantle this crane safe by cutting it with a torch

  • @tigergreg8
    @tigergreg8 Před 11 lety

    I am absolutely baffled at their reasoning here. How many of you would stand below a powerful structure such as this, when a man is using a torch to weaken it's links. I could not believe my eyes when watching this.

  • @paullarzazs9601
    @paullarzazs9601 Před 6 lety +2

    Painful to watch ... so much stupidity!
    No way I'd ever work around clowns like that!

  • @TABRO284
    @TABRO284 Před 8 lety

    The fork lift truck messing with the bottles was dangerous enough. The main event was utter stupidity.

  • @munchrx7
    @munchrx7 Před 6 lety +1

    Yep! Didn't see that one coming! 🙈

  • @wizo4692
    @wizo4692 Před 8 lety

    !!!!The bloke in the boom doing the cut actually lost his life that day!!!!

    • @rocketraccoon1976
      @rocketraccoon1976 Před 8 lety

      Incorrect. He landed in a safe spot under that wreckage. However, a guy in the NEXT accident at this worksite wasn't so lucky and got crushed.

  • @Adenzel
    @Adenzel Před 8 lety +1

    How none of them saw this coming is the most confusing part to me.

    • @rocketraccoon1976
      @rocketraccoon1976 Před 8 lety +1

      They screened out common sense in the hiring process and successfully reduced personnel costs by 50%. Guns or butter, y'know!

  • @20cricket09
    @20cricket09 Před 13 lety +1

    @mglsp that wouldve been funny to see the cylinder rack go flying thru the air and nockin the crane down.lol

  • @ElementofKindness
    @ElementofKindness Před 6 lety +1

    Well, pretty clear they went with the lowest bid with this crew.

  • @conoba
    @conoba Před 15 lety

    What exactly did they expect to happen?
    The forklift operator mishandling the stack of gas cylinders was crazy enough.
    Then they cut the most important beam on the structure as if they didn't know what it is for or as if they wanted to commit suicide.

  • @76629online
    @76629online Před 10 lety +1

    I'm thinking they didn't do a JSA before embarking on that little project...

  • @jimmy5F
    @jimmy5F Před 10 lety

    And the forklift driver is a real winner.

  • @gbzhemn1
    @gbzhemn1 Před 11 lety

    I do see your point my good sir! Being someone with barely any experience from only light construction and demolition work, i am quite mystified myself! Or maybe i should say being someone with a sense of ******* self preservation, cause to me that's really all it should take to make the decision not to cut that brace. I want to live! Liiiiive! =D

  • @NiallMS1
    @NiallMS1 Před 11 lety +1

    Perhaps use some well placed Semtex for the next one!

  • @Cotronixco
    @Cotronixco Před 8 lety +13

    At least nobody ended up down under it.

    • @thevandal7995
      @thevandal7995 Před 8 lety

      Holly shit I about laughed to death that was a good one

    • @todyefor7318
      @todyefor7318 Před 7 lety

      Cotronixco The welders lift was under it. if he was tied off, as wood be proper procedure in the U.S. he would not have been able to get out. I have no doubt there were injuries and likely at least one casualty. 😢

  • @Matthewseven13
    @Matthewseven13 Před 9 lety +4

    Yeah, thats it, almost done cutting a main support beam on a crane big enough to have a building on it.....yup....alllllmmmmmmooosssst there............

  • @edwardjonez6615
    @edwardjonez6615 Před 9 lety

    Apparently this was not the ore bridge demo accident which killed Mr. Rees. That happened in a subsequent accident tearing down the last "crane" at this site. It was this video which prompted his parents to contact the workplace safety authorities who did nothing to change they way these fly-by-nighters demolish things. Makes it all sadder still.

  • @edwardjonez6615
    @edwardjonez6615 Před 10 lety

    OHS Says according to National laws passed in 2000 they are not responsible for doing site inspections of demolition projects, only construction. " Providing work-site and process safety is the job of the demolition contractor." They also outsource the prosecution of violations to private law firms. WTF?

  • @KenanVideos
    @KenanVideos Před 13 lety

    The guy cutting shat bricks continuously after that event which founded the largest manufacturer of bricks now known as Australbricks.

  • @AlphaFlight
    @AlphaFlight Před 10 lety +3

    How do you feel bad for people with neglect to safety like that . its unreal

  • @MrPLC999
    @MrPLC999 Před 9 lety +3

    This is what happens when amateurs take on a serious engineering project with no professional consultation.

  • @MagnusRawstron
    @MagnusRawstron Před 11 lety

    many people have been killed with the cut away technique, i was working in a building when I noticed my colleagues had cut through every stanchion more than 75%, they never got me back in that building but ordered me in which i refused.

  • @isilder
    @isilder Před 13 lety

    Mr Gregory Rees
    2.26 Mr Gregory Rees was killed on 19 September 2002 when he was crushed during the
    demolition of No 6 Ore Bridge at the former Newcastle BHP Steelworks site at Port Waratah.
    Mr Rees was employed by Demtech Pty Ltd.19
    2.27 On 29 July 2003, WorkCover sent a report on the death of Mr Rees to the Newcastle
    Coroner’s Court.

  • @paulambry
    @paulambry Před 8 lety +1

    Excellent camera work.

  • @wiseman-hi4rq
    @wiseman-hi4rq Před 6 lety +1

    Mission accomplished.. Next job

  • @Mrcolincadorette
    @Mrcolincadorette Před 10 lety +8

    what a mary on the camera ! all that distance away from it and the fem got all shook up and scared and missed the shot by flinching what a jerk! there goes his chance to work for nbc lol !!!!!

    • @jpratt8676
      @jpratt8676 Před 10 lety

      Pretty sure they didn't want to show someone being killed on film....

    • @skinnypup1
      @skinnypup1 Před 10 lety +2

      give him a break he prolly dropped his purse

    • @firewatch814
      @firewatch814 Před 6 lety

      So said the chevy truck person....you like number 2.

    • @sddragon28
      @sddragon28 Před 5 lety

      Remember folks, 5 years ago. Colin was an asshole.