Skip to main content

Super job for a Demag CC 3800-1 without a Superlift counterweight

A Demag CC 3800-1 crane with an 84m-long main boom was recently set up in Germany without a Superlift counterweight to save space. The jobsite was the replacement of the old viaduct on the A45 Freeway that spans the Lahn River near Dorlar in Germany. Bietigheim-Bissingen-based crane service provider Wiesbauer solved the site’s space issues by using a Demag CC 3800-1. “This site required us to lift loads of 96-148tonnes at radii of 40-64m, so there was no option but to use a crawler crane in the 650tonne c
July 4, 2019 Read time: 4 mins
Demag CC 3800-1 lattice boom crawler crane on the A45 Freeway that spans the Lahn River near Dorlar, Gemrany
A Demag CC 3800-1 crane with an 84m-long main boom was recently set up in Germany without a Superlift counterweight to save space.


The jobsite was the replacement of the old viaduct on the A45 Freeway that spans the Lahn River near Dorlar in Germany. Bietigheim-Bissingen-based crane service provider Wiesbauer solved the site’s space issues by using a Demag CC 3800-1.

“This site required us to lift loads of 96-148tonnes at radii of 40-64m, so there was no option but to use a crawler crane in the 650tonne class despite the constrained space conditions,” said Marco Wilhelm, Wiesbauer project manager.

The company decided on the Demag CC 3800-1 lattice boom crawler crane, which was assisted by an AC 160-5 all-terrain crane - both from the manufacturer 1222 Terex. However, before the CC 3800-1 could be brought to the jobsite, its work area needed to be prepared first.

“The Lahn flows right along the work site, so the ground wouldn’t have been able to bear the heavy load exerted by our machine. That’s why the work area was prepared with a concrete foundation for the crane,” Wilhelm explained.

This made it possible to safely set up the crane with an LSL 1 configuration featuring an 84m main boom, 36m Superlift boom, 50tonne central ballast and 225tonne counterweight, with the counterweight in particular being absolutely crucial.

“The extremely heavy counterweight enabled us to set up the main boom without an additional Superlift counterweight. Moreover, this was what made it possible to use the enormous crawler crane to pick up the loads at such a tight work site, as leaving out the Superlift counterweight actually increased the crane’s usable working area significantly,” he said.

In fact, the Superlift counterweight was not needed until later during the lift.

Once the preparation work was done, the Wiesbauer team was ready to carry out all the lifts with the Demag CC 3800-1. To build the two bridge sections, it was necessary to perform the work in two steps at two different work areas. The steel components had to be lifted over the Lahn river in one step and over a parallel rail line in the other.

In each step of the project, one steel cross beam and four longitudinal steel girders had to be put into position. All these lifts followed the same pattern. Due to the space limitations, the Demag CC 3800-1 crane picked up the steel beams – which were up to 54m long and weighed 96-148tonnes – from the SPMT units without a Superlift counterweight.

The crane then slew to a pick-up point to attach the ready-to-go Superlift counterweight frame and its counterweight of 32tonnes to the Demag CC 3800-1 so that the latter would be able to work in bigger radii and, lift the beams to a height of around 22m and then set them down at the intended bridge points. The radii ranged from 40-64m. Due to their length, the beams were rigged to 20m- and 25m-long spreader beams to achieve the required precision for the lifts.

One of the priorities during the project was to minimise its impact on rail traffic, which is why the Wiesbauer team had to perform most of the lifts at night within very tightly defined time when there was no rail traffic. Despite these tight time windows and space conditions, the work was done in five weeks – and all of it including setup, lifting, disassembly, and then moving the crane to the other work area, including the corresponding setup and disassembly after lifting the last steel beam.

Also, outstanding weather conditions worked in the team’s favour, said Wilhelm.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Poetry in motion
    August 9, 2018
    A heavy-lift operation by Roll-iT using Enerpac equipment delivered a bridge deck - with a poem engraved on the underside - to Antwerp’s old harbour Only when the deck of the new Londenbrug Bridge is raised do travellers see the poem by Antwerp poet Stijn Vranken. It is written large on the underside of the 300tonne prefabricated steel deck. People waiting for a ship to pass the raised bridge now contemplate the poem’s message about ships transporting goods and people to and from the four corners of the
  • Sandvik’s DT1131i jumbo and iSURE software in Iceland and Norway
    August 14, 2019
    Sandvik’s DT1131i three-boom, electro-hydraulic jumbo, iSURE tunnel management software and the latest drill bit hardware were recently put to the test in Iceland and Norway* Czech contractor Metrostav recently achieved 105m of tunnel excavation in a record-breaking six days. But it will be consistent performance and progress that will see Iceland’s Dyrafjordurgong Tunnel in the remote Westfjords region open on time and on budget. The 5.3km Dyrafjordurgong Tunnel is costing around €69 million and due
  • Forming iconic structures
    July 18, 2012
    Specially designed and constructed formwork is being used to create some iconic bridges worldwide The Golden Ears Bridge over the Fraser River will unite the municipalities of Richmond, New Westminister and Delta in the scenic British Columbia province of Canada. The bridge, part of a CAD$800 million (US$670 million) project, is an 'extra dosed' cable stayed bridge, which means the deck will be supported by both cables and the structure itself. This design reduces the overall height of the two towers as req
  • Rebuilding a historic bridge linking the US and Canada
    March 8, 2016
    While many road authorities in North America are finding it difficult to stretch their bridge assets beyond half a century, one bridge is closing in on its centenary - David Arminas reports The international Peace Bridge, connecting the Canadian province of Ontario with the US state of New York, is 88 years young this year, and still going strong.