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    Medieval construction crane

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    • A Offline
      Aerilius
      last edited by

      This is a crane as it was used on construction sites some hundred years ago. It mainly served for vertical lifting (the jib is not movable).
      Similar cranes where moved level by level up as the building grew.

      Both rendered in Kerkythea with 70% Photonmapping high quality + 30% layer of Metropolitan Light Transport (combined in Gimp).
      The setting of the second image does not yet make sense 😄 , I'll have to unbuild the romanesque monastery.


      crane1.jpg


      crane2.jpg

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      • jeff hammondJ Offline
        jeff hammond
        last edited by

        looks cool.

        what kind of capacity did those things have?

        dotdotdot

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        • cottyC Offline
          cotty
          last edited by

          great texturing!

          my SketchUp gallery

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          • CoreMaster110C Offline
            CoreMaster110
            last edited by

            Looks bloody good! 👍

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            • gillesG Offline
              gilles
              last edited by

              @unknownuser said:

              looks cool.

              what kind of capacity did those things have?

              [url]http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grue_médiévale#Principe[/url]

              Une cage, d’un diamètre de 2 à 3 mètres, montée sur un axe entraîne un tambour solidaire. Sur ce tambour vient s’enrouler la corde qui tire une charge à soulever. L’effort E à fournir est égal au moment de la force F par le rayon r du tambour, divisé par le rayon R de la cage (ceci sans tenir compte du frottement des différents organes en rotation), soit .

              À l’intérieur de la cage, un ou plusieurs hommes marchent pour assurer la rotation. Un cliquet ou tout autre dispositif de sécurité empêche l’inversion accidentelle du mouvement dû à la charge. Un homme pouvait soulever un poids de 180 kg à 4 mètres sans fatigue et pouvait même aller jusqu’à soulever 500 kg de charge (homme de 70 kg, R=1,50 m, r= 0,15 m et un rendement de 0,7). Cette charge peut être plus importante avec l’adjonction d’une moufle.

              Google translation:
              A cage having a diameter of 2 to 3 meters, mounted on a fixed shaft drives a drum. On the drum is wound the rope pulling a load to be lifted. The effort to provide E is equal to the moment of the force F by the radius r of the drum, divided by the radius R of the cage (this regardless of the friction of the various rotating members) or.

              Inside the cage, one or more men walk to rotate. A ratchet or other safety device prevents accidental reversal of movement due to the load. A man could lift a weight of 180 kg to 4 meters without fatigue and could even raise up to 500 kg load (70 kg man, R = 1.50 m, r = 0.15 m and a yield of 0 , 7). This charge may be greater with the addition of a mitten.


              Cage_à_écureuil-principe.jpg


              800px-Cage_à_écureuils_Guédelon.jpg

              " c'est curieux chez les marins ce besoin de faire des phrases "

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              • A Offline
                Aerilius
                last edited by

                Thanks Gilles for the explanation (and the Guédélon photo).

                I will need some more cranes, especially one to raise the columns (that one is rather a lifting tower with the column in the center).

                The Romans had more sophisticated cranes (Tri-/Penta-/Polyspastos) with 3, 5 or many pulleys (up to 3 tons per person).
                Their lifting towers could move several hundred tons (but they only failed with 1200 tons at the Baalbek temple).

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                • DanielD Offline
                  Daniel
                  last edited by

                  Looks great. But, it's in a finished building, lifting a stone to...what?

                  My avatar is an anachronism.

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                  • A Offline
                    Aerilius
                    last edited by

                    As I have written, the only (provisory) scene I have is the finished building. Sometimes we have to reverse time and deconstruct it to do the final renderings.

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                    • pbacotP Offline
                      pbacot
                      last edited by

                      This is cool. The guy walking inside would really have to trust the ratchet!

                      MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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                      • Bryan KB Offline
                        Bryan K
                        last edited by

                        I love, LOVE, that people use SketchUp to do historical recreations.

                        Good job!

                        But I'm really impressed with the women in the render! 😆

                        Seriously, great design and render.

                        See my portfolio at https://delphiscousin.blogspot.com/

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                        • irwanwrI Offline
                          irwanwr
                          last edited by

                          Really nice modelling, texturing and rendering. 😮 👍

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