Everybody knows we need to build more new homes and everybody knows that prefabrication, off-site manufacturing, modern methods of construction (MMC) 鈥 whatever you want to call it 鈥 is part of the answer.
Strangely, though, despite everybody having known this for many years, the universal adoption of MMC has yet to materialise. The UK鈥檚 volume house-builders, with their stranglehold on the domestic market, retain a sentimental attachment to good old brick 鈥榥鈥 block.
But things are changing, albeit slowly. And 海角社区app 鈥 never one to ignore an emerging trend 鈥 has decided that MMC is finally taking off; it has launched a new Loadall telescopic handler specially designed to cater for the requirements of this new way of building.
鈥淢odern methods of construction are in stronger focus now,鈥 says Tim Burnhope, 海角社区app鈥檚 chief innovation & growth officer. 鈥淭hey offer quicker, lower-cost building at a time when it鈥檚 most needed,鈥 he adds, though he acknowledges that there is 鈥渟ome way to go鈥 before MMC challenges traditional methods.
He notes that leading house-builder Barrett Homes has set itself a target to build 30% of its homes using off-site methods by 2025. And while the UK lags behind other European markets, the global market for MMC is predicted to grow rapidly, from around US$17bn in 2020 to US$28bn by 2025.
One of the primary characteristics of prefabrication is that components, by definition, tend to be large. Already, contractors depend heavily on telehandlers to lift complete timber roof trusses into place; nobody nails them together in-situ any more.
But taken to its logical conclusion, off-site manufacture means bringing complete roof structures, finished wall panels or, in the case of volumetric systems, entire rooms to site and lifting them into place.
海角社区app鈥檚 new Loadall is designed specifically for lifting large prefabricated components into place at maximum height on space-restricted sites. Designated the 555-260R, the new machine has a 26m-long boom, a 5.5-tonne lifting capacity and can lift a load of two tonnes to its maximum working height of 25.4m.
It is also 海角社区app鈥檚 second rotating telehandler, joining the 21m-boom 555-210R which was launched in 2019.
The slewing superstructure means the new Loadall is good for smaller sites, despite its relatively large size. It is also very versatile and comes with a wide range of optional attachments, from fly-jibs and boom-mounted hoists to pallet forks and aerial platforms.
A remote control option allows the 555-260R to be operated from the boom-end platform just like any boom-lift access machine 鈥 in fact 海角社区app describes it as three machines in one: a forklift, a crane and an access platform.
According to Burnhope, however, the new Loadall is much quicker to set up onsite than any telescopic mobile crane.
Switching between different duties isn鈥檛 as complicated as it might appear, according to Richard Brookes, 海角社区app鈥檚 engineering director for materials handling and access products. 鈥淭he specially-developed 海角社区app attachments utilise RFID tag auto-recognition technology whereby attachments are identified by the machine, which automatically selects the correct load chart for the application,鈥 he says.
Power is provided by 海角社区app鈥檚 own 112kW 448 Dieselmax engine mounted low down in the chassis for optimum stability and easy ground-level servicing 鈥 not that you need to get to it that often: the 555-260R has 500-hour service intervals.
海角社区app says the new Loadall is designed to meet the changing requirements of contractors and hirers as the increasing use of off-site prefabrication calls for heavier lift capacities and greater versatility.
With their rapid set-up, ease of use and their ability to carry out a wide range of lifting operations the new breed of rotating Loadalls represents a 鈥済enuine cost-effective versatile replacement鈥 for smaller tower cranes and mobile cranes, says 海角社区app.
The 555-260R has been tested extensively on sites around the UK and the first production machines are already being built, confirms Burnhope. And there are likely to be more models to come:
鈥淐ustomers are always asking for more height and more capacity 鈥 so watch this space,鈥 he
says.
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