WELCOME TO RIVER DAVES PLACE

Heavy equipment exploit

Romans9

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2023
Messages
1,225
Reaction score
5,609
The company I contract with has been selling off some of their excess, outdated and unnecessary equipment.
They sold two impact crushers for parts.
A buyer from Mexico bought them off auction. They sent a truck up to pick the track impactor up. This machine is non operational.
They priced to have a crane come and pick it up and load onto the trailer which was going to cost about $5500.
They buyer turned that down and instead opted to hire a tow company to bring out two trucks and lift it up and back the trailer under it for $4000.
The tow company however wouldn’t do it until the Mexican company wired and had cash delivered. The owner said he had been burned by Mexican companies several times and he will not do anything without cash on the barrelhead.

I was sent there by the operations manager to oversee the whole thing and make sure no one took any unnecessary risks or tired anything compromising. Basically make sure no one got killed on mine property.
The poor bastard truck driver (and his family) had to wait 3 days for all this to get sorted out.

For the truck drivers thats 100,000 lbs on a lowboy pulled with a single frame truck. Probably a 9 speed….. but hey its a Mexican truck so no problem.….
Oh and the lowboy trailer had no less than 6 fish plates welded on the rails from being broke.

IMG_4626.jpeg


IMG_4627.jpeg


IMG_4629.jpeg


IMG_4630.jpeg


IMG_4631.jpeg


IMG_4633.jpeg
 

Dog

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 18, 2008
Messages
1,456
Reaction score
4,429
If they kill someone I am sure the .gov will pay for any medical or anything else...
 

Romans9

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2023
Messages
1,225
Reaction score
5,609
Why'd the one wrecker back in, and the other swing the boom? I'd be scared as shit...that's a pretty serious lift :oops:
Look at the outriggers on the rotator. That truck is massive.

If you look where the outriggers are at you’ll understand the placement of the truck isn’t as critical as the other truck.
 

monkeyswrench

To The Rescue!
Joined
Sep 7, 2018
Messages
29,107
Reaction score
82,701
Look at the outriggers on the rotator. That truck is massive.

If you look where the outriggers are at you’ll understand the placement of the truck isn’t as critical as the other truck.
I was looking at the daylight under the rear screws:oops: She still looked to be leaning.
It's funny you mention the wrecker company getting hosed previously. A guy I've done work for sold an RGN to a Mexican "company". They wanted to meet him with cash in Tucson. He declined, and asked for the money to be wired...when he was notified, he'd roll in and drop the trailer. Sketchy stuff!
 

Bajastu

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 10, 2017
Messages
907
Reaction score
2,145
I’ve sold millions of dollars of equipment south of the border and you always get a wire transfer up front. No deposits or bank checks.

I won’t get too deep, but the cartels love to buy equipment too. Laundering money with tractors is quite common.
 

RIVERBORN

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 23, 2020
Messages
786
Reaction score
1,571
This is all still greedy “American” faults. Just saying.
 

Sleek-Jet

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 20, 2007
Messages
13,249
Reaction score
16,624
I was looking at the daylight under the rear screws:oops: She still looked to be leaning.
It's funny you mention the wrecker company getting hosed previously. A guy I've done work for sold an RGN to a Mexican "company". They wanted to meet him with cash in Tucson. He declined, and asked for the money to be wired...when he was notified, he'd roll in and drop the trailer. Sketchy stuff!

Looks like the truck is set up on a bit of a slope and the drivers side is lifted up to level the crane before the lift.

For those that know, do those wreckers operate with the same alarms a crane does? The alarms that warn the operator they are close to the reach limit during a lift?

Pretty impressive that two wreckers can do that.
 
Last edited:

welldigger00

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 18, 2010
Messages
3,740
Reaction score
8,829
Are you sure that is 100k machine? No way in hell that’ll scale if the machine is 100k lbs. I’ve got a six axle setup as well, and as far as I can tell, that’s what dude is running. I can put about 65k on mY trailer. Even if it a four axle trailer, no way he’s legal on the drives. Or steers. As far as the rotators go, those things are super buff. If used them several times loading similar fashion.
 

Romans9

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2023
Messages
1,225
Reaction score
5,609
Are you sure that is 100k machine? No way in hell that’ll scale if the machine is 100k lbs. I’ve got a six axle setup as well, and as far as I can tell, that’s what dude is running. I can put about 65k on mY trailer. Even if it a four axle trailer, no way he’s legal on the drives. Or steers. As far as the rotators go, those things are super buff. If used them several times loading similar fashion.

92,000 plus the wings. I‘m estimating the wings are 5-6000.

I know it wouldn’t scale. That’s a three axle truck.
 

4Waters

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2016
Messages
34,119
Reaction score
86,509
Are you sure that is 100k machine? No way in hell that’ll scale if the machine is 100k lbs. I’ve got a six axle setup as well, and as far as I can tell, that’s what dude is running. I can put about 65k on mY trailer. Even if it a four axle trailer, no way he’s legal on the drives. Or steers. As far as the rotators go, those things are super buff. If used them several times loading similar fashion.
92,000 plus the wings. I‘m estimating the wings are 5-6000.

I know it wouldn’t scale. That’s a three axle truck.
@FlyByWire is mad he isn't coming his way🤣
 

Sharky

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2023
Messages
1,650
Reaction score
6,092
Well, I look at the bright side. . . .

They won't be taking I-70 through the mountains of Colorado.
 

Not So Fast

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 27, 2007
Messages
1,376
Reaction score
2,037
Before I retired in 2002 I ran a Kamatsu 1000 excavator (biggest one I ever ran) and dug across the Santa Ana river bed right below the 405 fwy, we lauyed a 84" concrete pipe in to the sewerplant, general cut was about 25-30 ft. and had to slope it out as far as the machine could reach because of the water table being right there below the surface and they had wells drilled above me that sort of contrilled the water but was a mother, had a D8 pushing the material away from me but he couldnt keep up haha. Had to install steel plates to keep the sand from running back in the ditch plus used 2-3" rock for bedding. It took as I remember about a month. That was a big excavator I think it tipped in at 250,000 lbs. you would think it was hard to run but it was a very smooth machine to operate 🤙
IMG_3529.JPG
IMG_3530.JPG
 

Smitty7

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2022
Messages
889
Reaction score
2,689
Before I retired in 2002 I ran a Kamatsu 1000 excavator (biggest one I ever ran) and dug across the Santa Ana river bed right below the 405 fwy, we lauyed a 84" concrete pipe in to the sewerplant, general cut was about 25-30 ft. and had to slope it out as far as the machine could reach because of the water table being right there below the surface and they had wells drilled above me that sort of contrilled the water but was a mother, had a D8 pushing the material away from me but he couldnt keep up haha. Had to install steel plates to keep the sand from running back in the ditch plus used 2-3" rock for bedding. It took as I remember about a month. That was a big excavator I think it tipped in at 250,000 lbs. you would think it was hard to run but it was a very smooth machine to operate 🤙 View attachment 1444369 View attachment 1444370
Running sand is the worst. Puts everyone on edge. You must have been a very good operator. Spent my hole life running equipment . Geez and I thought a pc 400 was big. Never saw a 1000.
 

Romans9

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2023
Messages
1,225
Reaction score
5,609
Before I retired in 2002 I ran a Kamatsu 1000 excavator (biggest one I ever ran) and dug across the Santa Ana river bed right below the 405 fwy, we lauyed a 84" concrete pipe in to the sewerplant, general cut was about 25-30 ft. and had to slope it out as far as the machine could reach because of the water table being right there below the surface and they had wells drilled above me that sort of contrilled the water but was a mother, had a D8 pushing the material away from me but he couldnt keep up haha. Had to install steel plates to keep the sand from running back in the ditch plus used 2-3" rock for bedding. It took as I remember about a month. That was a big excavator I think it tipped in at 250,000 lbs. you would think it was hard to run but it was a very smooth machine to operate 🤙 View attachment 1444369 View attachment 1444370

Nice!

Sand……unforgiving…..


I ran a Hitachi EX1800 excavator not shovel.
It was so smooth and easy to run it was scary.

I also helped rebuild a Hitachi UH801 Excavator style as well. It took us a month just to replace all the hoses.
 

Bajastu

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 10, 2017
Messages
907
Reaction score
2,145
Or here's a CAT 5230 Shovel (721,000 lbs) that we had to replace the swing bearings. Not broke, just a product impovement. You can see the guys having lunch under the house that is sitting on wood blocks! Located at Diamond Valley Lake, CA
IMG_E1269.JPG
 

FROGMAN524

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2013
Messages
5,704
Reaction score
10,449
The company I contract with has been selling off some of their excess, outdated and unnecessary equipment.
They sold two impact crushers for parts.
A buyer from Mexico bought them off auction. They sent a truck up to pick the track impactor up. This machine is non operational.
They priced to have a crane come and pick it up and load onto the trailer which was going to cost about $5500.
They buyer turned that down and instead opted to hire a tow company to bring out two trucks and lift it up and back the trailer under it for $4000.
The tow company however wouldn’t do it until the Mexican company wired and had cash delivered. The owner said he had been burned by Mexican companies several times and he will not do anything without cash on the barrelhead.

I was sent there by the operations manager to oversee the whole thing and make sure no one took any unnecessary risks or tired anything compromising. Basically make sure no one got killed on mine property.
The poor bastard truck driver (and his family) had to wait 3 days for all this to get sorted out.

For the truck drivers thats 100,000 lbs on a lowboy pulled with a single frame truck. Probably a 9 speed….. but hey its a Mexican truck so no problem.….
Oh and the lowboy trailer had no less than 6 fish plates welded on the rails from being broke.

View attachment 1444204

View attachment 1444205

View attachment 1444206

View attachment 1444207

View attachment 1444208

View attachment 1444209
What state is this in?
 

Not So Fast

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 27, 2007
Messages
1,376
Reaction score
2,037
Interesting replies eh, when you get to actually see these monsters its very cool and they are BIG!!!!!!!!!!! Then there are the ones that get modified for the job and again we excell haha.
We had a job in Solana Beach where we had to go under PCH highway with a storm drain pipe, normally not a problem but is was sloped so our pit for the push was about 30' deep so they added 10'' to the stick and the boom of the excavator so I could reach the bottom. Problem was the pit was small and to get to dig I had to back up so that I could get the stick in the pit then crawl forward as I dug and it kept getting deeper and deeper, also had to put a much smaller bucket on it because the extra lentgh reduced the amount of payload so that the diggger could handle it. Then there was the problem of not being able to see the bucket and where to dig lol. But we gotter her done
BobbyV
 

Not So Fast

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 27, 2007
Messages
1,376
Reaction score
2,037
Running sand is the worst. Puts everyone on edge. You must have been a very good operator. Spent my hole life running equipment . Geez and I thought a pc 400 was big. Never saw a 1000.
Thanks, we had a few 400's and I like them as they were pretty fast, the 1000 seemd slow compared to them but it was so smooth that I loved it plus the 3 yrad bucket moved a lot of earth, oh and it had A/C lol. Man has made some pretty fantastic macinery huh
 

Romans9

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2023
Messages
1,225
Reaction score
5,609
Or here's a CAT 5230 Shovel (721,000 lbs) that we had to replace the swing bearings. Not broke, just a product impovement. You can see the guys having lunch under the house that is sitting on wood blocks! Located at Diamond Valley Lake, CA View attachment 1444417

I believe that either the 5130 or the 5230 had known problems from the factory with the slew bearings.
The company I did work for bought the Hitachi EX1800 instead because of the issue.
 

rivrrts429

Arch Stanton...
Joined
Jan 4, 2008
Messages
21,325
Reaction score
45,917
Or here's a CAT 5230 Shovel (721,000 lbs) that we had to replace the swing bearings. Not broke, just a product impovement. You can see the guys having lunch under the house that is sitting on wood blocks! Located at Diamond Valley Lake, CA View attachment 1444417


I have to find the picture of my semi truck next to the wheel loader they had on that project. I parked it between the wheel loader a triple 7 dump. My semi was tiny compared to both.

I was hauling equipment back and forth to Diamond Valley daily when that job was going.

You brought back some cool memories that I forgot about.
 

Instigator

Just Livin up to My Name
Joined
Dec 19, 2007
Messages
5,020
Reaction score
5,446
One of our Cat 785 Rigid Frame Trucks loaded on a beam trailer being hauled fully assembled. Had to have a push truck. A couple hundred tires on the transport to move it.
Pic doesn't show both pull and push trucks but you can clearly see all the tires on the trailer.
😁
Canada 785.jpg
 

BHC Vic

cobra performance boats
Joined
May 24, 2014
Messages
25,651
Reaction score
20,211
My buddy Doug owns an equipment company. Stultz equipment. I’m not exactly sure what or how it works. I think he owns the tractor and rents them out but then services/repairs them on the job everyday? I don’t know he’s always dirty but one of the most solid guys in my circle.
IMG_3003.jpeg
 

Your ad here

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2014
Messages
5,008
Reaction score
8,390
My buddy Doug owns an equipment company. Stultz equipment. I’m not exactly sure what or how it works. I think he owns the tractor and rents them out but then services/repairs them on the job everyday? I don’t know he’s always dirty but one of the most solid guys in my circle. View attachment 1444449
There is a market for rental equipment and operators. Equipment always breaks so make sure you have a service truck!
 

Not So Fast

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 27, 2007
Messages
1,376
Reaction score
2,037
A side note pertaining to the pay scale. I was reading that floor sweepers and french fry coks wanted $20 @ hour and I thought helll when I retired scale for operators was around $27 an hour, sort of made me feel bad so I called an old buddy and asked him what scale was nowadays, he tells me over $50 @ hr+, now I feel better:cool: Still not enough for the respomsibility you assume when you run one of these monsters!!!!!
 

rivermobster

Club Banned
Joined
Dec 28, 2009
Messages
59,394
Reaction score
59,825
I was just starting out in the industry. I was about 17 when it was completed, and they started filling the reservoir. I worked at the CAT dealer who supplied all of the machines to AWZ and Kiewit.

I used to drive out there regularly to watch. I was So stoked we were gonna have a new recreational lake in SoCal!

We all know what happened after it finally got built. That was the biggest tease EVER!!! LoL

Even went to the museum once to check out all the bones they found there...

 

Bobby V

Havasu1986
Joined
Dec 20, 2007
Messages
23,744
Reaction score
13,546
A side note pertaining to the pay scale. I was reading that floor sweepers and french fry coks wanted $20 @ hour and I thought helll when I retired scale for operators was around $27 an hour, sort of made me feel bad so I called an old buddy and asked him what scale was nowadays, he tells me over $50 @ hr+, now I feel better:cool: Still not enough for the respomsibility you assume when you run one of these monsters!!!!!
Operating Engineers #12 in Orange is closer to $60 a hour plus over $30 a hour in fringe benefits. https://sccaweb.org/labor-relations/wage-rates/
 

rrrr

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 19, 2007
Messages
15,848
Reaction score
35,274
This thread about big equipment reminded me of a Cajun pipefitter that worked for me in the 80s.

We were talking about large projects one day, and he told me "I've been on jobs that were so big I used to take naps in the bolt hole of a flange."

😁
 

4Waters

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2016
Messages
34,119
Reaction score
86,509
This thread about big equipment reminded me of a Cajun pipefitter that worked for me in the 80s.

We were talking about large projects one day, and he told me "I've been on jobs that were so big I used to take naps in the bolt hole of a flange."

😁
what-in-the-pacific-rim-is-this-hex-bolt-for-v0-bmNlZXRkdG1hd2NjMc7wdVHN8PJnfLa1Qv54hh4beQhWU...jpeg
 

Bobbyv

Active Member
Joined
Dec 7, 2022
Messages
27
Reaction score
120
Remember the company politics……………..there now you’re over it
Your correct on that point, some of the foreman and also the owner of the company had their heads up thier asses, but I worked there for over 20 years, the good out weighed the bad !!!! All in all a good place to work.
PS Do I know you??
 

River Dirt 2

Brummett 21
Joined
Apr 2, 2010
Messages
2,717
Reaction score
7,244
Anyone see this in Parker ?


 
Last edited:

HNL2LHC

What is right and what is wrong these days!
Joined
Jun 25, 2018
Messages
15,905
Reaction score
30,431
Anyone see this in Parker ?

View attachment 1445163
There a few large things stopped there for whatever reason. Some of them are HUGE!!!
 
Top