Australian mine build

06 January 2020

Australian crane hire, heavy haulage, and special projects provider Tutt-Bryant Heavy Lift & Shift is engaged in lifting structural steel at the South Flank iron ore deposit in Western Australia.

tcc-1400-tutt-003

The Link-Belt TCC-1400 has a maximum load capacity of 127 tonnes (at 2.3 metres)

Tutt-Bryant is using its 127 tonne capacity Link-Belt TCC-1400 telescopic crawler crane to build mining infrastructure for BHP, an Anglo-Australian multinational mining, metals and petroleum company headquartered in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

The iron ore deposit is 16 miles long and the TCC-1400 will be on site for around 12 months helping construct the mining infrastructure. The mining project is valued at $2.9 billion USD ($3.8 billion AUD) and scheduled for running operation by 2021.

The TCC-1400 was shipped to Sydney from Singapore through its parent company Tat Hong, along with two additional 90 tonne TCC-1100 telescopic crawler cranes. The TCC-1100 was then transferred from Sydney to Perth and then on to the site.

“The availability of the machine (TCC-1400) was a factor,” said Malcom Smith, national operations manager for Tutt-Bryant. “It was a stock machine and we had a requirement for a specific machine with that sort of boom length [12.92 - 59.5 metres] for BHP at South Flank.”

TCC1400 Tutt 2020 Wall

The TCC-1400’s boom length, between 12.92 - 59.5 metres, was one reason the crane was selected for the job
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