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View Full Version : How Not to Lift a Heavy Load



Jim Rimmer
08-12-2010, 1:02 PM
Last night (Wed, Aug 11) I was working on the computer at home and happened to have the TV on the History Channel. The show “Chasing Mummies” came on and I just left it there. Pretty soon it caught my attention and I started watching. If you want to watch something that will show you numerous ways NOT to lift a load, try to catch a replay of this program.

They were trying to lift a granite pylon from Cleopatra’s tomb in sunken Alexandria. The granite was about 12 feet tall and weighed 9 tons. You really need to watch this fiasco. They had an ancient crane truck on a boat. As they lifted the granite, the boat began to list to one side, the truck front end started coming off the deck, and finally the rigging strap broke and dropped the granite. When it fell there were still 3 divers in the water not too far away from the pylon.

It gets better from there as they finally lifted it out, tried to chain the truck down while it was bouncing. They finally got the stone on shore after many other scary events. As they tried to stand it up it began to tip and a guy ran under it with what looked like a 2x4 to prop it up. Remember now, the strap had already broken once and this stone weighs 9 tons. Think a 2x4 will hold it?

This is just some of the really outrageous things I saw. It's worth a look. Anyway, check your TV schedule and try to catch a replay of this. I don’t know how they finally got this thing to its final resting place with no injuries or deaths.

Dustin Cranford
08-12-2010, 2:50 PM
I like the part where they got it to the bank and the guy was standing under it as if to be holding it up incase the cables broke. All I could see was squashed bug.

Chris Harry
08-12-2010, 2:53 PM
I know it sounds gruesome but Ive always wondered exactly what someone that got crushed under something like that would look like.

Gary Click
08-12-2010, 3:20 PM
From first hand experience, I think that you only think that you want to know.

Joe Chritz
08-12-2010, 3:24 PM
From first hand experience, I think that you only think that you want to know.

This is accurate.

Joe

Chris Harry
08-12-2010, 3:28 PM
This is accurate.

Joe

As the original poster to that reply, I will have to agree with both of you.