Mobile Crane Selection Based on Workspace Requirements and Cost Parameters

2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
Zuzana Struková ◽  
Mária Kozlovská ◽  
Marián Ištvánik
2011 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Struková ◽  
M. Ištvánik

Abstract Definition of types, amount and positions of cranes in construction site planning has a big impact on the overall productivity and cost effectiveness of a construction project. It is not rare, that engineers during preparation phase of construction fault in crane selection. It implies big financial losses for the company because of wrong crane rent. In visualisation of mobile crane operation in 3D is noticeable that working radius of the crane is considerably less then number listed in crane technical documentation (capacity chart). The built construction itself can reduce the crane radius when the crane boom snags the built object edge. Several computer applications were developed in order to help practitioners in selecting and using of cranes. In the paper is presented one version of non-commercial software tool (Mobile Crane Simulator) useful in construction preparation as a tool for selecting and locating of the mobile crane at construction sites. The tool was developed by authours of the paper. The principles of the tool creation are also explained.


2001 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 91-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Al-Hussein ◽  
S. Alkass ◽  
O. Moselhi

2001 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 91-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Al‐Hussein ◽  
Sabah Alkass ◽  
Osama Moselhi

Author(s):  
Albert Ben-David ◽  
Aviad Shapira

Mega building projects typically employ numerous tower cranes covering the entire area of the building footprint and staging areas with multiple overlapping work envelopes. This paper aims to answer the following question: Are the determinants of crane selection for mega building projects similar to projects serviced by a small number of cranes? On-site interviews found: (1) the visibility of the crane forest in the surroundings of the project affects the approach to crane selection; (2) various modes of action are taken by project management to share information with the neighboring residents and business and to ease the hardships of living and working near a busy construction site; and (3) cranes are often selected and located such that they could dismantle other cranes, due to difficulties of using a dismantling mobile crane in the depth of the crane array.


2021 ◽  
pp. 116053
Author(s):  
Mahmoud Eltourkey ◽  
Adel Alshibani ◽  
Awsan Mohammed ◽  
Ali Shash ◽  
Firas Tuffaha

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 2405
Author(s):  
Samar Fatima ◽  
Verner Püvi ◽  
Ammar Arshad ◽  
Mahdi Pourakbari-Kasmaei ◽  
Matti Lehtonen

Power distribution networks are transitioning from passive towards active networks considering the incorporation of distributed generation. Traditional energy networks require possible system upgrades due to the exponential growth of non-conventional energy resources. Thus, the cost concerns of the electric utilities regarding financial models of renewable energy sources (RES) call for the cost and benefit analysis of the networks prone to unprecedented RES integration. This paper provides an evaluation of photovoltaic (PV) hosting capacity (HC) subject to economical constraint by a probabilistic analysis based on Monte Carlo (MC) simulations to consider the stochastic nature of loads. The losses carry significance in terms of cost parameters, and this article focuses on HC investigation in terms of losses and their associated cost. The network losses followed a U-shaped trajectory with increasing PV penetration in the distribution network. In the investigated case networks, increased PV penetration reduced network costs up to around 40%, defined as a ratio to the feeding secondary transformer rating. Above 40%, the losses started to increase again and at 76–87% level, the network costs were the same as in the base cases of no PVs. This point was defined as the economical PV HC of the network. In the case of networks, this level of PV penetration did not yet lead to violations of network technical limits.


2021 ◽  
Vol 123 ◽  
pp. 103520
Author(s):  
Roy Dong Wang ◽  
Tarek Zayed ◽  
Wei Pan ◽  
Saina Zheng ◽  
Salman Tariq

2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (S1) ◽  
pp. 28-29
Author(s):  
William A. Gray ◽  
Thathya V. Ariyaratne ◽  
Robert I. Griffiths ◽  
Peter W.M. Elroy ◽  
Stacey L. Amorosi ◽  
...  

IntroductionDespite advances in endovascular interventions, including the introduction of drug-eluting stents (DES), high target lesion revascularization (TLR) rates still burden the treatment of symptomatic lower-limb peripheral arterial disease (PAD). EluviaTM, a novel, sustained-release, paclitaxel-eluting DES, was shown to further reduce TLRs when compared with the paclitaxel-coated Zilver® PTX® stent, in the IMPERIAL randomized controlled trial. This evaluation estimated the cost-effectiveness of Eluvia when compared with Zilver PTX in Australia, based on 12-month clinical outcomes from the IMPERIAL trial.MethodsA state-transition, decision-analytic model with a 12-month time horizon was developed from an Australian public healthcare system perspective. Cost parameters were obtained from the Australian National Hospital Cost Data Collection Cost Report (2016–17). All costs were captured in Australian dollars (AUD), where AUD 1 = USD 0.69 (June 2020). Complete sets of clinical parameters (primary patency loss, TLR, amputation, and death) and cost parameters from their respective distributions were bootstrapped in samples of 1,000 patients, for each intervention arm of the model. One-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed.ResultsAt 12 months, modeled TLR rates were 4.5 percent for Eluvia and 8.9 percent for Zilver PTX, and mean total direct costs were AUD 6,537 [USD 4,511] and AUD 6,908 [USD 4,767], respectively (Eluvia average per patient savings; overall cohort=AUD 371 [USD 256]; diabetic cohort=AUD 625 [USD 431]). In probabilistic sensitivity analyses, Eluvia was cost-effective relative to Zilver PTX in 92.0 percent of all simulations at a threshold of $10,000 per TLR avoided. Eluvia was more effective and less costly (dominant) than Zilver PTX in 76.0 percent of simulations.ConclusionsIn the first year after the intervention, Eluvia was more effective and less costly than Zilver PTX, making Eluvia the dominant treatment strategy for treatment of symptomatic lower-limb PAD, from an Australian public healthcare system perspective. These findings should be considered when formulating policy and practice guidelines in the context of priority setting and making evidence-based resource allocation decisions for treatment of PAD in Australia.


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