Heavy lift

(Redirected from Heavylift)

In transportation, heavy lift refers to the handling and installation of heavy items which are indivisible, and of weights generally accepted to be over 100 tons and of widths/heights of more than 100 meters. These oversized items are transported from one place to another (sometimes across country borders), then lifted or installed into place. Characteristic for heavy-lift goods is the absence of standardization, which requires individual transport planning.

Heavy lift ship transporting oil platform in shetland

Mode Of Transport

  • Road Transport
  • Air Transport
  • Sea Transport
  • Rail Transport

Typical cargo

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Heat exchanger being handled by mobile cranes for project cargo transportation

Typical heavy-lift cargo includes generators, turbines, reactors, boilers, towers, casting, heaters, presses, locomotives, boats, satellites, military personnel and equipment. In the offshore industry, parts of oil rigs and production platforms are also lifted; some of these are also removed at the end of an installation's working life. Recent notable lifts have included several of >2000 metric tons in the de-commissioning of the North West Hutton oil field in the British sector of the North Sea.[citation needed]

Typical cargo consist of

  • Wind turbines
  • Farm machinery
  • Earth moving machinery
  • Cranes
  • Mining equipment and accessories
  • Storage tanks
  • Heavy industrial components
  • Construction machinery[1]

Mode of transport

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Transformer being transported on Nicolas 8 line hydraulic modular trailer coupled with a MAN 8x6 ballast tractor.

Road Transport

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Road transport of heavy and oversized load is called heavy haulage specialized equipment is used to haul these load, which are only employed for heavy-duty work. This type of transport requires route planning and escort vehicles. Road transport is carried out from or to manufacturing plants or factories.

Heavy Lift Road Equipment.

Air Transport

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Siemens Transformer being loaded onto an Antonov AN-225 cargo plane at Zagreb airport.

Heavy lift transport of project cargo is done using cargo planes, which are one of the largest aircraft due to the size of the load these loads are carried to or from airports via road transport. In 2021 Gebrüder Weiss a logistics company chartered an Antonov An-225 Mriya world's largest cargo plane to transport project cargo from China to Poland for a Polish factory. This was done due to scarcity of time in the COVID-19 pandemic.[2]

Largest Cargo Planes

 
Oversize cargo being transported on a deck barge in Antwerp

Sea Transport

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Sea transport is the preferred mode of transport for long distance due to large space and low cost when compared to air transport, but this mode of transport requires more planning and the transport itself takes long time. Loads are carried to the port via road transport, later cranes and gantry are used to place loads onto or into the vessels.[4]

Heavy Lift Sea Equipment.

 
Soyuz TMA-16 space rocket, being transported on a specialized railcar to Baikonur Cosmodrome spaceport in Kazakhstan.

Rail Transport

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For land transport, rail transport is also considered as an option for hauling heavy lift cargo over road transport due to advantages of higher speeds, bulk transportation and lower cost compared to road transport. Companies have managed to haul cargos over 250 tons and 30 meters long, and some have also started moves longer cargos like windmill blades. Disadvantage to the rail transport is the access ability and size restrictions. Railroads are not connected to airports and ports directly, ultimately the cargo has to be transmitted to road transport to reach the final destination.[5]

Heavy Lift Rail Equipment

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Comyns, Brandt (2023-10-05). "What Is Heavy Haulage? Everything You Need to Know". Australia Wide Haulage. Retrieved 2024-01-05.
  2. ^ "Largest cargo aircraft chartered for project cargo to Poland". www.gw-world.com. Retrieved 2024-01-09.
  3. ^ "10 largest cargo planes in the world by maximum capacity". Trans.INFO. Retrieved 2024-01-09.
  4. ^ "What Is Project Cargo? A Comprehensive Information and Shipping Guide – Freight Course". Retrieved 2024-01-12.
  5. ^ "Project cargo on rails". Project Cargo Journal. 2021-09-28. Retrieved 2024-01-12.

Literature

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  • Pieper, Marcus: Durchführung eines Schwergut-Transportes mit Binnenschiff und Straßenfahrzeug aus technischer und organisatorischer Sicht. Bremen 1997.
  • Internationale Transport-Zeitschrift; 2008, 13/14. Spezial: Break Bulk, Schwergut-Special