Skip to main content

Canadian manufacturer of remote-controlled GOTCHA! eyes Europe

With a brief but loud safety warning sound, one of the latest construction equipment inventions for sling operations drops its load, in this case a very light load. Daniel Hebert, vice president of the Canadian firm Crane Equipment.ca, was recently demonstrating the aptly-named GOTCHA! device that the Quebec-based company will be highlighting at the Intermat exhibition in Paris in April. GOTCHA! Is an automated sling release that uses a remote control to release loads being moved by crane. With the press
February 11, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Two versions of Gotcha! are available
With a brief but loud safety warning sound, one of the latest construction equipment inventions for sling operations drops its load, in this case a very light load.

Daniel Hebert, vice president of the Canadian firm 7993 Crane Equipment.ca, was recently demonstrating the aptly-named GOTCHA! device that the Quebec-based company will be highlighting at the Intermat exhibition in Paris in April.

GOTCHA! Is an automated sling release that uses a remote control to release loads being moved by crane. With the press of a button, the device releases one end of a sling or chain once the load is safely in the required position.

"Until now, you had to send workers to get the load off the crane, which remained a risky manoeuver,” said Hebert. But with GOTCHA!, everything is done automatically, accurately and safely."

The device looks like an artillery shell but that is for a very good reason, explains Hebert. Because GOTCHA! can be attached to loads that are sometimes raised great heights, the curved surface of GOTCHA doesn’t catch the wind, thus avoiding the problem of a spinning load.

Two models are available for loads of up to 2.25tonnes and 4.5tonnes. A third model, up to 18.12tonnes, is in being designed.

GOTCHA! comes with two re-chargeable 12-volt batteries and each battery has been tested for up to 200 triggers. A UL certified charger is also included.

The remote control has a range of up to around 305m. It is also programmable using more than 60,000 codes, meaning it can be tweeked for operating in an environment where there is a high risk of radio interference affecting the remote. A flashing light indicates when the remote’s 9-volt batteries need replacing.

Before the device is “fired”, a signal alerts workers in the area to the impending release of a load. GOTCHA! also has positioning sensors for the ejector plates and a weight sensor which prevent accidental firing – the release of the load.

Hebert said GOTCHA! is most useful where extreme accuracy of placement is needed, such as positioning roof trusses or the lowering of worker cages into narrow holes for foundation investigation or road stabilisation.

GOTCHA, whose patent is pending, is already used in several Canadian provinces and US states and the company is now targeting the European market, which is its reason for being at Intermat in April.

Crane Equipment.ca, located in the Montreal suburb of Varennes, designs, manufactures and distributes lifting equipment.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A sinkhole in St Albans near London swallows up the road
    October 9, 2015
    Around 20 residents of St Albans, a town near London, were evacuated after a huge sinkhole appeared overnight. The hole, 20m in diameter and 10m deep, cut right across at the road and well into an adjoining garden, leaving one family’s car stranded on the driveway. Residents are said to have heard a crash before the huge crater appeared, according to a BBC report. The local fire service said it had been aware of a small hole that was due to be filled in, but a resident called the station at 1:30 in the mor
  • King of all it surveys
    June 20, 2012
    Topcon Europe Positioning has launched a new total station range to its mid-range engineering grade portfolio. Available in three different angular accuracy models (2.54cms, 7.62cms and 12.7cms), and running the latest version of Windows CE 6.0, the OS Series is said by Topcon to redefine this class of optical measuring device.
  • Sentry Keypad prevents unauthorised operation
    March 9, 2017
    EquipmentShare’s new Sentry Keypad offers improved machinery protection from unauthorised use, the company said at CONEXPO-CON/AGG 2017. “Each user has a unique identification number to access equipment,” said William Schlacks, president of Equipment Share. “If he doesn’t have the right certification, the machine won’t start.”
  • Leading manufacturers demonstrate asphalt recycling expertise
    November 13, 2013
    Cutting-edge RAP production technology and other key asphalt plant equipment in demand globally is examined by Guy Woodford Grossmann, a building services company based in south-east Germany, is now using a state-of-the-art Benninghoven Competence BA 4000 asphalt plant to produce asphalt. Equipped with Benninghoven’s Hot Recycling System RA 180, the plant is said to be highly efficient, economical and one of the most powerful available.