

First Job for Hofmann Kran-Vermietung’s New Liebherr LR 1700 1.0 – Gallery
The new Liebherr LR 1700 1.0 crawler crane is gaining momentum. The first jobs deploying the state-of-the-art powerhouse from Ehingen have been completed with tremendous success. The 700t crawler crane recently fulfilled the high expectations placed in it at its première in a wind farm near Paderborn. The local crane company Hofmann Kran-Vermietung GmbH & Co KG, a subsidiary of the Bracht Group, used the crane to erect a Nordex Delta 4000 wind turbine. The LR 1700-1.0 masterfully dealt with the prefabricated 96m high concrete tower for the turbine with a hub height of 164m. The heaviest components were the nacelle and drive train with gross loads of 72t and 75t.

Teamwork: The heaviest tower segment of the Nordex wind turbine weighs in at a gross load of 70 tonnes. A Liebherr LTM 1250-5.1 mobile crane is helping to erect the tubular tower.
At the “Holzhausen” wind farm, about 20km east of Paderborn, the LR 1700-1.0 was equipped with a 165m long main boom. This includes nine lattice boom sections of the somewhat wider H Version (“Heavy”), each twelve metres long. “The H-Boom lets us operate under higher wind loads”, explains crane operator Christoph Bergmaier. The greater wind tolerance of this boom configuration can save the crane and assembly teams on site many a stoppage due to excessive wind. Liebherr allows wind speeds of 11.2m/s for the LR 1700-1.0 – as for all current LR crane types with special wind power equipment configurations. With only a minimally reduced maximum load, this value even increases to 13.4m/s. This is an invaluable advantage for customers and end users, because normally the wind stops at 9m/s.

Good mood: Christian Bergmaier (left) and Stephan Dickel in the spacious cabin of their new Liebherr crawler crane.

The new Liebherr LR 1700-1.0 crawler crane proves its merit in the wind farm.
Hofmann’s new LR 1700-1.0 comes with all the innovations of Liebherr’s crawler crane development from recent years – and has other time-saving features too. “The VarioTray divisible derrick ballast and V-Frame allow us to work with 60t of derrick ballast during the entire assembly of the turbine – so we don’t have to carry out any time-consuming ballasting”, Christoph Bergmaier is pleased to say. The large ballast pallet is only docked for erecting or taking down the lattice boom – which, by the way, can be erected to an impressive length of 198m. A procedure taking about ten minutes with just four bolts – and a total of 375t of counterweight is already hanging from the derrick boom.
The continuously adjustable V-frame ballast radius enabled the blue-painted Hofmann crane to operate in relatively little space on the construction site near Paderborn – even during the slewing process. For the assembly of the wind turbine components, the two drivers then steered their crawler crane close to the tower – with a radius of 26m, all components were assembled. Even the heaviest loads on the hook, the 72t nacelle and the 3t drive train, were handled without any problems. “The crane can be operated very smoothly and effectively even with heavy loads at height,” reports Christoph Bergmaier, who takes turns with Stephan Dickel at the controls of the Liebherr crane. His succinct conclusion after the first job with the new LR 1700-1.0 at the wind farm: “Powerful crane and really user-friendly!”




Featured Title photograph
Peak performance: The twelve-metre fixed tip of the LR 1700-1.0 can handle a load of 170t, surpassing even the capacities of the LR 1750/2. Here it is used for installation of the drive train with a gross weight of 75t. The design of this boom tip allows relatively generous manoeuvring of large components such as the nacelle just below the pulley head.
Source Liebherr