Otago Daily Times

Port’s crane upgrade on schedule

- STAFF REPORTER

PORT Otago’s major upgrade of Crane 3 is progressin­g ‘‘exactly to plan’’, the company says.

The second of the port’s two massive container cranes is finally getting an upgrade, following delays caused by Covid19.

The main drive system has been fully replaced and commission­ed and attention was now focused on the crane’s selflaying cable reel system.

A new larger reel was necessary to carry a longer cable so it could reach the end of the recentlyex­tended Multipurpo­se Wharf, the port’s infrastruc­ture asset engineer and project manager for the upgrades, Jon Visser, said.

‘‘The reel itself was successful­ly replaced last week. It has an external diameter of 5.4m — 0.4m larger than the old reel.

‘‘While that doesn’t sound like a big difference, this allows it to carry an extra 30m worth of cable, weighing an additional 225kg.

‘‘In combinatio­n with shifting the cable entry point on the wharf north by around 65m, the crane will be able to travel the full length of both the Multipurpo­se and the Container Terminal Wharves,’’ Mr Visser said.

The reel also required larger motors and couplings to rotate it. Delta cable jointers Gordon Hamlin and Karolis Tamulionis were part of the team reconnecti­ng the composite cable to the crane and at the substation on the ground.

The cable included copper conductors that provided 11kV electricit­y to the crane, as well as a sixcore fibreoptic cable used for data communicat­ions.

An engineer from ZPMC China has just arrived in New Zealand to help commission the new reel system, Mr Visser said.

The overall project was on schedule to be completed by midSeptemb­er so the focus could then be shifted to final preparatio­ns for the cruise season, he said.

The old reel and motors would be disassembl­ed and stored to be used as critical spares for Cranes 3 and 4 or available if another port needed them.

 ?? PHOTO: ADAM LAW ?? A head for heights . . . Delta cable jointers Gordon Hamlin (left) and Karolis Tamulionis (obscured) are part of the team reconnecti­ng the composite cable to Port Otago’s Crane 3 and the substation.
PHOTO: ADAM LAW A head for heights . . . Delta cable jointers Gordon Hamlin (left) and Karolis Tamulionis (obscured) are part of the team reconnecti­ng the composite cable to Port Otago’s Crane 3 and the substation.

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