SafetyConsult said:
John Thank you for taking the time to reply. You can assume that the Tower crane (or it could be any mobile, gantry ect) is effectively grounded. The second assumption is that the crane is outside of the close proximity radius of the generating antenna. The phenomenon is usually associated with AM signals, but not exclusively. The end result is RF burns of the employees (contact), but only for certain locations of the crane parts I.E. only when the boom is perpendicular to the ground (to give you an example). finally RF grounding is a solution, but not necesary the most feasible way to abate the issue. Once again thank you for taking the time to reply.
SafetyConsult,
You need to understand something here. What you are suggesting is almost impossible! So some of the information you have just given me MUST be wrong!
So no, its a very bad idea to "assume" the crane, and all its parts, are grounded. Let me tell you why!
The only way to get current to flow in a circuit is to create a voltage difference between two points. That is physically the only way you could get a shock or a burn. If every single metal part of the crane is electrically bonded, that means joined with heavy copper wire, to every other part, and the whole crane structure is "earth bonded" with copper wire and Earth rods into the local ground, then it would be very difficult to get a shock from any part of the machine.
This is what it sounds like to me. In some electrical panel on the crane, probably a messy looking panel that guys have been pulling at the wires, one wire has shorted off whatever people are getting the shock from. If this is a port ship-to-shore gantry crane, and they are getting the shock while raising and lowering the boom, then the boom of the crane is not properly bonded to earth. Or the Boom operators cab is not bonded to earth. If its a luffing-jib tower crane, then the jib needs to be bonded to earth, and the cab.
I will repeat it again. If every metal part is Earth bonded to every other metal part, and Earth bonded back to the supply transformer, it would be almost impossible to get a shock or burn.
I am very very skeptical of your radio antenna theory. I promise you, its really unlikely unless your crane is within 100 yards of some massive TV transmitter.
On very large cranes, just because there might be massive steel bolts and pins joining the structure together, this does NOT mean its electrically bonded. It might look like its bonded, but its NOT. Across the pivot hinges on the boom of a crane, the steel pins will most likely be greased. This could have the effect of kind of "insulating" the boom from the rest of the crane. Its will definatly cause increased "impedence" in the electrical connection for short circuit currrents. Do you physically see a very heavy copper wire that bonds the electrical panels on the crane boom, to the main electrical supply?
Also, what is the "generating antenna" you suspect might be involved here? And is this a legal case you are fighting in court or just a general complaint from crane drivers that you want to solve? Describe the type of crane if you can, this might help me? The more specific you are with details, the more help i can give you.
John.