Container & Cargo Handling – Page 85
-
News
REACH OR LIFT WHAT'S IT TO BE?
The debate rumbles on: is a reachstacker better suited to handling full containers in the yard than a forklift? Nick Elliott finds there are arguments for either solution.
-
News
AND THE RETURN ON INVESTMENT?
So how does it all stack up in terms of cost efficiency? Dan Pettersson, Kalmar' s product manager, says: " We' re not much into the argument between FLTs and reachstackers. Most of the world has recognised that the reachstacker is in most cases a more efficient and cost-effective handling ...
-
News
HORSES FOR COURSES
What characterises the port planning consultant' s role today? Nick Elliott talks to some leading players and finds whilst each has its own particular perspective, some issues are common to all.
-
News
THE CALIFORNIAN WAY
Duane Kenagy and Larry Nye of US consultants Moffatt & Nichol (M& N) report on developments in California to ensure containers move quickly and cleanly through the port interface.
-
News
LOGISTICS, LOGISTICS, LOGISTICS
In contrast, the progress being made in development of Shanghai''s logistics industry is far quicker. 15 April saw the opening of China''s first logistics park, situated close to the city''s Waigaoqiao container terminals.
-
News
CENTRE OF THE WORLD
Shanghai is fast becoming the centre of the world, as far as the container shipping industry and the port companies which serve it are concerned. And the port''s current work-in-progress, the leviathan Yangshan project, promises only to reinforce that. Gavin van Marle reports.
-
News
CUSTOMER CAN GET IT WRONG
Alex Hughes weighs up the pros, cons and respective market niches of gantry and mobile harbour cranes and examines how each stack up against the continuous ship unloader.
-
News
ALTENWERDER AND DELTA COUNT COST OF AUTOMATION
Tom Todd assesses the experiences of two of Europe''s leading terminals with automation.
-
News
COLLABORATION CUTS CONGESTION AT DURBAN
Prior to 1994, South Africa, shunned by the international community because of its apartheid policy, had little need of enhanced capacity at its international container terminals. However, as the situation vis-a-vis the rest of the world improved dramatically, the country found itself chronically short of adequate maritime facilities to cope ...
-
News
HIGHER AND HEAVIER DOWN UNDER
Clark Equipment Australia (CEA), which manufactures the Omega range of locally produced reachstackers and other container handling equipment, reports strong growth in the Australian market with a distinct customer preference for higher-reaching stacking and larger capacity models. The firm is also sticking a tentative toe into the waters of South ...
-
News
MHC GAINS RECOGNITION IN BULK SECTOR
MHC sales for bulk handling are on the increase and the deck crane has evolved into a land creature. Nick Elliott talks to Liebherr and Gottwald.
-
News
TRAINING A PRIORITY
" From the view of the MHC operating company (our customers), qualified crane personnel are an important requirement to achieve maximum cost efficiency. It is for this reason that Gottwald offers a comprehensive basic and advanced training programme for crane personnel, " says the firm.
-
News
GOTTWALD SCORES IN THE GULF
In the first quarter of 2004 Gottwald received three new MHC orders from customers in the UAE. These include one HMK 330 EG fourrope grab MHC for professional bulk handling for Saqr Port Authority in Ras Al Khaimah and two HMK 300 E MHCs ordered by Dubai Ports Authority (DPA) ...
-
News
AN ALTERNATIVE SOLUTION
In an ingenious example of alternative technology, Liebherr has modified its deck cranes for use on the quay. The Fixed Cargo Crane (FCC) and Travelling Cargo Crane (TCC) concept is relatively new but has proven to be an ideal solution both technically and economically for quaysides which perhaps have a ...
-
News
HOW DO THEY COMPARE WITH THEIR MECHANICAL COUSINS?
Alex Hughes talks to pneumatic unloader manufacturers about their uses, environmental issues and maintenance and leasing options.
-
News
HIGHER AND HIGHER
Considering the huge container imbalances prevalent in most of the world' s trades and the consequent need to move empty boxes from place to place, it' s a wonder Empty Container Handlers (ECHs) are not in the news more. Nick Elliott reports on how economics, speed and stacking capability make ...
-
News
LIEBHERR UNVEILS ITS NEW MACHINE
Liebherr has just launched its LRS 645 reachstacker - a new product line for the Austrian company. The machine' s most notable feature is its curve-shaped telescopic boom which gives it extra reach. Nick Elliott discovers more.
-
News
BOT GIVES BUILDERS THE EDGE
Construction firms in the international contracting business are often tempted to invest in the projects they are building in order to realise better returns. Nick Elliott reports.
-
News
THE SHORTER THE VOYAGE THE MORE LIKELY THE VIABILITY
It''s the familiar trickle-down effect. Trade grows. Ships get bigger to gain economies of scale. Hub ports order bigger quay cranes to work the bigger ships. Meanwhile smaller ports are growing and also have to accommodate bigger ships - either as feeders or direct callers - so they too need ...
-
News
CLEAR THE WAY
The idea of having lines of trucks backed up outside the terminal while gate operators deal with several troublesome containers and cranes in the port stand idle, is the stuff of nightmares for terminal operators. But congestion at the terminal gate is a perennial problem for the industry.