Hiring Heavy Construction Equipment: Tips, Ideas and Money-Saving AdviceHiring Heavy Construction Equipment: Tips, Ideas and Money-Saving Advice


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Hiring Heavy Construction Equipment: Tips, Ideas and Money-Saving Advice

After years in the construction industry, I went on hiatus last year to start my own company doing interior painting. But I decided to take my experience from construction work and start a blog. I hope that if you are hiring construction equipment, my posts provide you with the guidance you need. I love writing and hope that passion shows in these posts. When I'm not writing on this blog, I like to design kites and work on model railroads, and I just started dabbling with watercolours on canvas.

3 Reasons To Add Rigging Services to Your Crane Hire Deal

If you need to hire a crane for your construction site, then you will have to bring in specialist workers if your crew aren't qualified to work with cranes. You don't simply need to find an operator, you also need someone with rigging experience. Riggers build and dismantle cranes; they also work out the best ways to move loads safely.

If your crane hire company offers rigging services, then think about adding this to your contract. A rigger brings useful benefits to the table. What are they?

1. Ensure Crane and Lifting Safety

You have to take responsibility for the health and safety of your crew. When you bring in a crane, you have to make sure that it is doesn't pose a risk to anyone on or around your site.

So you must erect the crane safely and securely. There should be no risk of it tipping or falling. It shouldn't pose any threat of accident or damage while you use it. Its loads should be correctly attached and moved to meet relevant safety standards. You then have to dismantle it safely at the end of the job.

You might need specialist skills and training to do all these jobs. If you hire a crane that comes with a rigger, then you can leave all these jobs in their hands.

2. Speed Up Your Lifting Jobs

While you can hire in a rigger as a subbie instead of using your hire company's crew, this isn't always an ideal solution. Your rigger might not have worked with the type or model of crane you've hired. They might need to do some extra research to work out how to put it up, load it and then take it down.

A rigger who works for the crane hire company will have experience of working on all the company's cranes. They know exactly what to do and can get started as soon as they arrive on your site. Your crane will be up and running faster.

3. Meet Your Licence Responsibilities

If you need a rigger on-site, then they might need a high-risk licence. The type of licence they need will depend on the work you need them to do. If you don't know much about rigging yourself, then you won't automatically know this.

Your crane hire company can work this out for you. They understand what kind of rigging licence a crane needs; they can also evaluate the types of jobs you need the crane to do to make sure the rigger they send has the right level of licence.

To find out more about rigging services, contact crane hire companies.