US2067344A - Bridge span inspection and maintenance traveler - Google Patents

Bridge span inspection and maintenance traveler Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2067344A
US2067344A US85109A US8510936A US2067344A US 2067344 A US2067344 A US 2067344A US 85109 A US85109 A US 85109A US 8510936 A US8510936 A US 8510936A US 2067344 A US2067344 A US 2067344A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
traveler
bridge
span
tracks
bridge span
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US85109A
Inventor
William H Ringe
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US85109A priority Critical patent/US2067344A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2067344A publication Critical patent/US2067344A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E01CONSTRUCTION OF ROADS, RAILWAYS, OR BRIDGES
    • E01DCONSTRUCTION OF BRIDGES, ELEVATED ROADWAYS OR VIADUCTS; ASSEMBLY OF BRIDGES
    • E01D19/00Structural or constructional details of bridges
    • E01D19/10Railings; Protectors against smoke or gases, e.g. of locomotives; Maintenance travellers; Fastening of pipes or cables to bridges
    • E01D19/106Movable inspection or maintenance platforms, e.g. travelling scaffolding or vehicles specially designed to provide access to the undersides of bridges

Definitions

  • Fig. 1 and Fig. la form together a side elevation of my traveler applied to a diagrammatic cross section of the Golden Gate Bridge span.
  • the figures are arranged to slightly overlap at the center as indicated by the numbered parts.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical cross section of the traveler at the line 22 of Fig. 1, showing its intermediate tower.
  • Fig. 3 is a vertical cross section of the traveler at the line 3-3 of Fig. 1, showing the central carriage suspension.
  • Fig. 4 is an end view of the traveler as seen from the line 4-4 of Fig. 10. showing one of the end towers and the end carriages.
  • Fig. 5 is an enlarged detail of the roller carriages.
  • Fig. 6 is an end view of the carriages of Fig. 5.
  • the invention comprises an elongated traveling platform or frame of skeleton steel construction flexibly suspended on tracks just below the steel work of the bridge to extend transversely thereof and the frame provided with two flxed end towers extending upward adjacent the outer sides of the bridge side trusses and an intermediate tower reaching up almost to the under side of the bridge and roliable along the frame from side to side of the bridge within its side trusses.
  • the intermediate tower is provided with a telescopic or extensible upper portion with platform which may be raised between the main transverse truss floor beams (which in the Golden Gate Bridge are some 9 feet deep) to per mit inspection or painting of every part, as well as the under side of the roadway or deck, and its supportingbeams.
  • Theintermediatetowerishand or motor propelled along the frame, and the whole apparatus is hand or motor propelled along the bridge to travel the entire distance between main bridge supporting towers, it being contemplated that there be a complete apparatus for each span.
  • the Golden Gate Bridge has been used to show the application of the invention, and the cross section of which bridge on account of its great mass of trusses, girders, beams. braces, etc., is herein diagrammatically represented, the side trusses spaced some 88 feet out- 5 side to outside, beingdesignated l, the main cross beams or girders 2, angular braces 3 and deck structure including its floor beams and pavement 4.
  • I provide an elongated structural steel frame comprising two spaced truss beams 5 connected together at opposite ends by suitable framework 6, and carrying a lattice-work tower 1 at each end extending upward adjacent the outer sides of the bridge, and connected in one or more places intermediate the length of the truss beams as by a lower transverse framework 8 and extending upward from which are two tapered hanger frames 9, suspended from rolling carriages ill at their upper ends provided with rollers ll (preferably ball-bearing) roliable along the lower flanges of tracks l2 suspended from the bottom of the main bridge beams 2 and hung on rods or hangers l3 from the under side of the deck of deck beams, at intervals between the main beams.
  • rollers ll preferably ball-bearing
  • the two ends of the traveler are similarly supported from rolling carriages l4, having rollers IS on the lower flanges of I beam tracks l6 secured preferably to the underside of. the main bridge trusses l.
  • Both carriages l0 and M are articulated as generally shown in Figs. 5 and 6, to compensate for misalignment of tracks, or changes due to expansion, contraction, settling, stresses of wind, loads, etc., so that no binding can possibly occur, and the rollers, engage the lower flange of the track at both sides of its web so that the carriages cannot come off.
  • This articulate construction of the carriages is subject to wide variation but is here indicated as by forming the carriages of several members Ill l0, 10'', etc., vertically and horizontally pivoted together as at l1 and I8 45 respectively, and the track hangers are similarly made self adjusting as by ball and socket type joints l9.
  • one or more rollers of the end carriages 50 may be driven in either direction by a suitable electric motor 20, preferably backgeared and either suitably mounted on the carriage members or on a bracket 2
  • the motors at opposite ends of the traveler should, of course, be wired together and synchronously operated so that both ends of the traveler will definitely travel at the same speed. It is also desirable that both motors incorporate the known type of electric brakes which are released only while the motor circuits are closed, so that wherever the traveler stops it will be automatically locked.
  • the wiring is not indicated, nor the controls which may be placed at any convenient point on the traveler.
  • the intermediate tower is shown at 23, and is supported on rollers 24 rolling on tracks 25, suspended on hangers 28 along the lower edges of truss beams 5 and is also propelled in either direction by a suitable motor drive 21, though it is evident that this tower, as well as the traveler itself, may be manually operated instead of motor operated in smaller installations or where saving of cost is important.
  • the three towers are fitted with stairs or ladders 28, and the ladder of the intermediate tower 23 is also extensible as at 28', to rise with the upper extensible platform 29 of this tower which is provided with downwardly extending guides 34, and may be raised by means of a motor or hand winch 30 on the platform so as to extend upward to the dotted position 29' at any point between main transverse bridge beams 2.
  • a motor or hand winch 30 on the platform so as to extend upward to the dotted position 29' at any point between main transverse bridge beams 2.
  • All three towers have several platforms as at St, for men and materials and suitable guard rails may be provided at any or all platforms as indicated at 32.
  • a ladder 33 may be provided at the top of the end towers so that the workmen or inspectors can gain access to the bridge deck when the days work is done. This ladder is suitably pivoted to the tower structure so that it cannot accidentally fall into the water.
  • top surfaces of the traveler trusses 5 are very wide, they are used as walkways by inspectors and workmen to reach opposite ends or the intermediate tower, and suitable hand-rails as partially indicated at 35 are provided.
  • This invention dispenses entirely with scaffolds and slings in bridge painting and maintenanse work and makes every square foot easily accessible for inspection, cleaning, painting, or repairing, and permits such work, heretofore only carried out under great danger, difliculty and expense, to be accomplished with thoroughness in a fraction of the time and almost free from danger to the men.
  • While my inspection and maintenance traveler is particularly applicable to great suspension bridges where its first cost it not prohibitive, it is manifest that it may be made much simpler for smaller bridges, and for large truss bridges the intermediate tower or towers may be omitted, and the end towers may be as high as desired, or for inverted truss bridges, the traveler suspension carriages may be at the top of the towers from tracks along the upper edge of the bridge as the particular position of the suspension tracks and carriages will depend largely on the nature of the steel bridge construction on which the traveler is installed.
  • Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span from side to side thereof arranged and adapted to support workmen in accessible relation to and for working and painting on the span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks on the bridge span to roll longitudinally thereof below the same, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
  • Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprisng a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span from side to side thereof arranged and adapted to support workmen in accessible reiation to and for working and painting on the span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks on the bridge span to roll longitudinally thereof below the same, intermediate track and roller sup ports for said traveler under the bridge spanbetween its side trusses, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
  • Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprisng a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span from side to side thereof arranged and adapted to support workmen in accessible relation to and for working and painting on the span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks on the bridge span to roll longitudinally thereof below the same, intermediate track and roller supports for said traveler under the bridge span between its side trusses, an upwardly extending frame on said traveler to which the intermediate rollers are secured, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
  • Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span, and beyond the outer sides of the bridge span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks to roll longitudinally thereof, work towers on the projecting ends of said traveler extending upward adjacent the outer sides of the bridge span, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
  • Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span and beyond the outer sides of the bridge span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks to roll longitudinally thereof, work towers on the projecting ends of said traveler extending upward adjacent the outer ends of the bridge span and provided with working platforms, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
  • Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span and projecting beyond the outer sides thereof, tracks carried by the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler engaging said tracks to permit the traveler to roll longitudinally of the span, work towers at the ends of the traveler extending up adjacent the outer sides of the span, and an intermediate work tower on said traveler under the bridge.
  • Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span and projecting beyond the outer sides thereof, tracks carried by the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler engaging said tracks to permit the traveler to roll longitudinally of the span, work towers at the ends of the traveler extending up adjacent the outer sides of the span, an intermediate work tower on said traveler under the bridge and roller supports for said intermediate work tower adapting it to roll transversely of the bridge. 7
  • Bridge span'inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span, and projecting beyond the outer sides thereof, tracks carried by the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler engaging said tracks to permit the traveler to roll longitudinally of the span, work towers at the ends of the traveler extending up adjacent the outer sides of the span, an intermediate work tower on said traveler under the bridge and means for changing the effective height of the intermediate work tower.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Bridges Or Land Bridges (AREA)

Description

Jan. 12, 1937. w RINGE 2,067,344
BRIDGE SPAN INSPECTION AND MAINTENANCE TRAVELER Filed June 15, 1936 2 Sheets-Sheet l INVENTOR. VV/LL/AM H. R/NsE.
ATTORNEYS.
Jan. 12,1937.
BRIDGE SPAN INSPECTION AND MAINTENANCE TRAVELER w. H. RINGE 2,067,344
Filed June 13, 1936 2 SheetsSheet 2 1 JA L5 4 (ll/J K NN NI N NJ N NIWl/H/I/MR/IWII/QW 1L J1. JL L Jl\ AJ. I L 25 26 20 4 INVENTOR. W/LL/AM H RING:
BY W ATTORNEYS Patented Jan. 12, 1937 UNITED STATES BRIDGE SPAN INSPECTION AND MAINTENANCE TRAVELER v William 11. BingerBerkeley, Calif. Application June 13, 1936, Serial No. 85,109 mm. (cl. 304-9 This invention relates to the inspection and maintenance of large bridge spans, particularly large suspension bridge spans such as the Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge now under process of construction, and the principal object of the invention is to provide permanently installed traveling platform apparatus which will afford inspectors, workmen and painters constant accessibility to practically all parts of the bridge structure between supporting towers. 'Special features and advantages of the construction will appear in the following description and accompanying drawings.
In the drawings Fig. 1 and Fig. la form together a side elevation of my traveler applied to a diagrammatic cross section of the Golden Gate Bridge span. The figures are arranged to slightly overlap at the center as indicated by the numbered parts. I
Fig. 2, is a vertical cross section of the traveler at the line 22 of Fig. 1, showing its intermediate tower.
Fig. 3 is a vertical cross section of the traveler at the line 3-3 of Fig. 1, showing the central carriage suspension.
Fig. 4, is an end view of the traveler as seen from the line 4-4 of Fig. 10. showing one of the end towers and the end carriages.
Fig. 5 is an enlarged detail of the roller carriages.
Fig. 6 is an end view of the carriages of Fig. 5.
Briefly described the invention comprises an elongated traveling platform or frame of skeleton steel construction flexibly suspended on tracks just below the steel work of the bridge to extend transversely thereof and the frame provided with two flxed end towers extending upward adjacent the outer sides of the bridge side trusses and an intermediate tower reaching up almost to the under side of the bridge and roliable along the frame from side to side of the bridge within its side trusses. The intermediate tower is provided with a telescopic or extensible upper portion with platform which may be raised between the main transverse truss floor beams (which in the Golden Gate Bridge are some 9 feet deep) to per mit inspection or painting of every part, as well as the under side of the roadway or deck, and its supportingbeams. Theintermediatetowerishand or motor propelled along the frame, and the whole apparatus is hand or motor propelled along the bridge to travel the entire distance between main bridge supporting towers, it being contemplated that there be a complete apparatus for each span.
In the drawings the Golden Gate Bridge has been used to show the application of the invention, and the cross section of which bridge on account of its great mass of trusses, girders, beams. braces, etc., is herein diagrammatically represented, the side trusses spaced some 88 feet out- 5 side to outside, beingdesignated l, the main cross beams or girders 2, angular braces 3 and deck structure including its floor beams and pavement 4.
Beneath the bridge structure and extending entirely across and projecting beyond both sides thereof, I provide an elongated structural steel frame comprising two spaced truss beams 5 connected together at opposite ends by suitable framework 6, and carrying a lattice-work tower 1 at each end extending upward adjacent the outer sides of the bridge, and connected in one or more places intermediate the length of the truss beams as by a lower transverse framework 8 and extending upward from which are two tapered hanger frames 9, suspended from rolling carriages ill at their upper ends provided with rollers ll (preferably ball-bearing) roliable along the lower flanges of tracks l2 suspended from the bottom of the main bridge beams 2 and hung on rods or hangers l3 from the under side of the deck of deck beams, at intervals between the main beams.
The two ends of the traveler are similarly supported from rolling carriages l4, having rollers IS on the lower flanges of I beam tracks l6 secured preferably to the underside of. the main bridge trusses l.
Both carriages l0 and M are articulated as generally shown in Figs. 5 and 6, to compensate for misalignment of tracks, or changes due to expansion, contraction, settling, stresses of wind, loads, etc., so that no binding can possibly occur, and the rollers, engage the lower flange of the track at both sides of its web so that the carriages cannot come off. This articulate construction of the carriages is subject to wide variation but is here indicated as by forming the carriages of several members Ill l0, 10'', etc., vertically and horizontally pivoted together as at l1 and I8 45 respectively, and the track hangers are similarly made self adjusting as by ball and socket type joints l9.
'I'o propel the traveler longitudinally of the bridge, one or more rollers of the end carriages 50 may be driven in either direction by a suitable electric motor 20, preferably backgeared and either suitably mounted on the carriage members or on a bracket 2| extended from the frame 5, and the motor suitably geared or chain con- 55 nected as at 22, to a gear or sprocket; on a shaft to which one of the rollers or a specially large driving roller is secured. The motors at opposite ends of the traveler should, of course, be wired together and synchronously operated so that both ends of the traveler will definitely travel at the same speed. It is also desirable that both motors incorporate the known type of electric brakes which are released only while the motor circuits are closed, so that wherever the traveler stops it will be automatically locked. The wiring is not indicated, nor the controls which may be placed at any convenient point on the traveler.
The intermediate tower is shown at 23, and is supported on rollers 24 rolling on tracks 25, suspended on hangers 28 along the lower edges of truss beams 5 and is also propelled in either direction by a suitable motor drive 21, though it is evident that this tower, as well as the traveler itself, may be manually operated instead of motor operated in smaller installations or where saving of cost is important. v
The three towers are fitted with stairs or ladders 28, and the ladder of the intermediate tower 23 is also extensible as at 28', to rise with the upper extensible platform 29 of this tower which is provided with downwardly extending guides 34, and may be raised by means of a motor or hand winch 30 on the platform so as to extend upward to the dotted position 29' at any point between main transverse bridge beams 2. A
All three towers have several platforms as at St, for men and materials and suitable guard rails may be provided at any or all platforms as indicated at 32. Also a ladder 33 may be provided at the top of the end towers so that the workmen or inspectors can gain access to the bridge deck when the days work is done. This ladder is suitably pivoted to the tower structure so that it cannot accidentally fall into the water.
As the top surfaces of the traveler trusses 5 are very wide, they are used as walkways by inspectors and workmen to reach opposite ends or the intermediate tower, and suitable hand-rails as partially indicated at 35 are provided.
From the foregoing description it will be evident to any mechanical engineer that many variations in details of construction may be made. For smaller bridges solid instead of lattice beams may be used for the frame, rigid type roller carriages may be used, the long frame 5 may have a continuous floor where weight and effect of winds need not be considered, and there may be two intermediate towers, also the end towers may have telescopic or extensible upper portions as shown for the intermediate tower, also accessories such as dumb-waiters may be installed on any or all of the towers to aid in raising and lowering materials such as paint, brushes, tools, etc. Also, on extremely wide bridges, the intermediate suspension rollers may be driven as well as the end carriages.
This invention dispenses entirely with scaffolds and slings in bridge painting and maintenanse work and makes every square foot easily accessible for inspection, cleaning, painting, or repairing, and permits such work, heretofore only carried out under great danger, difliculty and expense, to be accomplished with thoroughness in a fraction of the time and almost free from danger to the men.
While my inspection and maintenance traveler is particularly applicable to great suspension bridges where its first cost it not prohibitive, it is manifest that it may be made much simpler for smaller bridges, and for large truss bridges the intermediate tower or towers may be omitted, and the end towers may be as high as desired, or for inverted truss bridges, the traveler suspension carriages may be at the top of the towers from tracks along the upper edge of the bridge as the particular position of the suspension tracks and carriages will depend largely on the nature of the steel bridge construction on which the traveler is installed.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim is:
1. Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span from side to side thereof arranged and adapted to support workmen in accessible relation to and for working and painting on the span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks on the bridge span to roll longitudinally thereof below the same, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
2. Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprisng a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span from side to side thereof arranged and adapted to support workmen in accessible reiation to and for working and painting on the span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks on the bridge span to roll longitudinally thereof below the same, intermediate track and roller sup ports for said traveler under the bridge spanbetween its side trusses, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
3. Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprisng a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span from side to side thereof arranged and adapted to support workmen in accessible relation to and for working and painting on the span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks on the bridge span to roll longitudinally thereof below the same, intermediate track and roller supports for said traveler under the bridge span between its side trusses, an upwardly extending frame on said traveler to which the intermediate rollers are secured, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
4. Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span, and beyond the outer sides of the bridge span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks to roll longitudinally thereof, work towers on the projecting ends of said traveler extending upward adjacent the outer sides of the bridge span, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
5. Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span and beyond the outer sides of the bridge span, tracks secured to and extending along the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler frame rollabiy suspending the latter from the tracks to roll longitudinally thereof, work towers on the projecting ends of said traveler extending upward adjacent the outer ends of the bridge span and provided with working platforms, and means for propelling said traveler along said tracks.
6. Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span and projecting beyond the outer sides thereof, tracks carried by the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler engaging said tracks to permit the traveler to roll longitudinally of the span, work towers at the ends of the traveler extending up adjacent the outer sides of the span, and an intermediate work tower on said traveler under the bridge.
7. Bridge span inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span and projecting beyond the outer sides thereof, tracks carried by the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler engaging said tracks to permit the traveler to roll longitudinally of the span, work towers at the ends of the traveler extending up adjacent the outer sides of the span, an intermediate work tower on said traveler under the bridge and roller supports for said intermediate work tower adapting it to roll transversely of the bridge. 7
8. Bridge span'inspection and maintenance apparatus comprising a traveler frame extending transversely under and adjacent to the bridge span, and projecting beyond the outer sides thereof, tracks carried by the bridge span, rollers carried by the traveler engaging said tracks to permit the traveler to roll longitudinally of the span, work towers at the ends of the traveler extending up adjacent the outer sides of the span, an intermediate work tower on said traveler under the bridge and means for changing the effective height of the intermediate work tower.
9. In the construction specified in claim 6, a plurality of working platforms on said towers together with means for workmen gaining access thereto.
WILLIAM H. RINGE.
US85109A 1936-06-13 1936-06-13 Bridge span inspection and maintenance traveler Expired - Lifetime US2067344A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US85109A US2067344A (en) 1936-06-13 1936-06-13 Bridge span inspection and maintenance traveler

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US85109A US2067344A (en) 1936-06-13 1936-06-13 Bridge span inspection and maintenance traveler

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2067344A true US2067344A (en) 1937-01-12

Family

ID=22189524

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US85109A Expired - Lifetime US2067344A (en) 1936-06-13 1936-06-13 Bridge span inspection and maintenance traveler

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2067344A (en)

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2919763A (en) * 1954-11-22 1960-01-05 Kronhaus Semen Marine scaffold
US3035659A (en) * 1961-03-16 1962-05-22 Robbie A Sims Form stripping scaffold
US3465846A (en) * 1967-07-10 1969-09-09 Koor Ind & Crafts Co Ltd Installation for approaching portions of an airplane
US4546852A (en) * 1984-02-07 1985-10-15 Fruehauf Corporation Adjustable service platform apparatus for a gantry crane
US4630708A (en) * 1986-01-29 1986-12-23 Thompson George J Semi-adjustable service platform apparatus for gantry crane
US4848516A (en) * 1986-02-17 1989-07-18 Yoneyama Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Movable scaffold
EP0514364A1 (en) * 1991-04-16 1992-11-19 H. JUNGER BAUGESELLSCHAFT m.b.H. und Co. KG Apparatus for carrying out inspection and renovation works or the like on undersides of bridges
EP0533977A1 (en) * 1991-09-26 1993-03-31 INTERSER GROUP S.r.l. Overhead traveling device for carrying out pipelining and large mantainance works in industrial buildings
US6170106B1 (en) * 1999-09-01 2001-01-09 Alpha Painting & Construction Co., Inc. Movable safety tunnel for use during bridge maintenance
US6227330B1 (en) * 1999-07-15 2001-05-08 Mark A. Preusser Support structure for suspending a work surface below a girder
US10119229B1 (en) 2015-04-27 2018-11-06 New Access Solutions, Inc. Work platform rail system

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2919763A (en) * 1954-11-22 1960-01-05 Kronhaus Semen Marine scaffold
US3035659A (en) * 1961-03-16 1962-05-22 Robbie A Sims Form stripping scaffold
US3465846A (en) * 1967-07-10 1969-09-09 Koor Ind & Crafts Co Ltd Installation for approaching portions of an airplane
US4546852A (en) * 1984-02-07 1985-10-15 Fruehauf Corporation Adjustable service platform apparatus for a gantry crane
US4630708A (en) * 1986-01-29 1986-12-23 Thompson George J Semi-adjustable service platform apparatus for gantry crane
FR2593486A1 (en) * 1986-01-29 1987-07-31 Thompson George SEMI-ADJUSTABLE EQUIPMENT WITH SERVICE PLATFORMS FOR CRANE-PORTIC
US4848516A (en) * 1986-02-17 1989-07-18 Yoneyama Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Movable scaffold
EP0514364A1 (en) * 1991-04-16 1992-11-19 H. JUNGER BAUGESELLSCHAFT m.b.H. und Co. KG Apparatus for carrying out inspection and renovation works or the like on undersides of bridges
EP0533977A1 (en) * 1991-09-26 1993-03-31 INTERSER GROUP S.r.l. Overhead traveling device for carrying out pipelining and large mantainance works in industrial buildings
US6227330B1 (en) * 1999-07-15 2001-05-08 Mark A. Preusser Support structure for suspending a work surface below a girder
US6302238B1 (en) * 1999-07-15 2001-10-16 Mark A. Preusser Support structure for suspending a work surface below a girder
US6170106B1 (en) * 1999-09-01 2001-01-09 Alpha Painting & Construction Co., Inc. Movable safety tunnel for use during bridge maintenance
US6338175B2 (en) * 1999-09-01 2002-01-15 Orah Constuctive Technologies Incorporated Movable safety tunnel for use during bridge maintenance
US10119229B1 (en) 2015-04-27 2018-11-06 New Access Solutions, Inc. Work platform rail system

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2067344A (en) Bridge span inspection and maintenance traveler
US3550723A (en) Bridge scaffold
US4660680A (en) Means and methods for erecting a work platform under the deck of a structure
US2669490A (en) Traveling scaffold for bridges and the like
US4074789A (en) Mobile rolling support system for scaffolding used in building construction
JP5752591B2 (en) Large crane
KR880000177B1 (en) Propulsion apparatus for cranes
US3066757A (en) Traveling scaffold
US4201275A (en) Means for the renovating and refurbishing of overhead structures
US2088871A (en) Maintenance traveler for bridge spans
CN210946528U (en) Movable prefabricated hanging flower basket of assembling
JP2008057226A (en) Method of constructing building on bridge girder, and bridge having the building
CN108118718A (en) Piping lane wall rapid construction device and method
CN111852036A (en) Sliding hoisting method for long-span pipe truss structure
US2730411A (en) Double-deck portable scaffold
KR100530351B1 (en) Telescopical Trolley Car for Inspection
SU908989A1 (en) Gantry crane and method of erecting bridges
CN219823484U (en) Attached tower crane pedestrian passageway
CN217781781U (en) Self-walking operation platform for construction of cable-stayed bridge bottom
CN212000637U (en) Movable operating platform for movable support
JPS5847803A (en) Bridge crane
CN218969806U (en) Protective trolley for pavement slab and railing dismantling construction
SU630203A1 (en) Lifting attachment to bridge crane for performing repair, construction and erection jobs
SU850839A1 (en) Mobile scaffold for crane-mounting of latticework bridge span structures
SU511418A1 (en) Mobile scaffolding