Dunnage
dunnage
is not a primary purpose for using dunnage
OSHA 1926, Subpart N- Cranes, Derricks, Elevators- does not appear to DIRECTLY address dunnage under outriggers. However- the standards DO require that a piece of equipment be operated as the maker instructed- and makers will recommend dunnage for almost all surfaces- to spread the ground load, and reduce outrigger slippage. In most circumstances, adequate dunnage will be minimum 3 inch thick hardwood, tightly spaced (no gaps). Plywood, pallets, and scrap should be avoided. For size, a rough rule of thumb is to divide crane capacity in tons by 5. That will equal the number of sq ft of dunnage under each outrigger pad. Example- 20 ton crane- divide by 5=4. 4 sq ft- or a 2x2 pad, should provide adequate support under MOST soil conditions. Extremes of moisture may require more.
A socket set with sizes ranging from 10-18mm, a transmission jack or equivalent (I used a motorcycle jack and 6 pieces of 4x4 dunnage)
There are only two generally disused words: dunnage and tunnage.dunnage - cargo cushioning material / baggage (archaic)tunnage - a tax on tonnage*(The term "punnage" is not an actual word, but is often used humorously to suggest "punish.")
It is unknown who invented the top hat. It is thought to be descended from the sugarloaf hat. George Dunnage created the first silk top hat in 1793. It was only in 1797 that the top hat made its first appearance, when it was worn by English haberdasher James Heatherington.
The answer could be any of these words: cabbage, coinage, courage, dunnage, garbage, luggage, massage, message, package, passage, postage, sausage, storage, signage, storage, village, voltage, wattage
Couple of reasons. One, wood is cheaper and easier to replace. Two, wood is more resilient than metal, and if it bends, it won't necessarily be permanently bent that way. Three, wood is lighter than metal. Four, if dunnage needs to be nailed into the floor (for example, to keep freight stationary), it can be done with a wooden floor.
On the newer Volvo tractors, I've noticed a lot of them have the battery compartment under the catwalk (which is fine if you're pulling just vans or tankers, but not such a hot feature if you're a flatbed driver who has to keep tarps, coil racks, or dunnage on the catwalk). You simply lift the catwalk platform (which is hinged), and you can get to the battery box.
Some of the prepositions that can follow the verb 'located' are:located about...located above...located across...located after...located against...located along...located among...located around...located at...located behind...located below...located beneath...located beside...located between...located by...located in...located inside...located near...located off...located on...located opposite...located outside...located past...located through...located toward...located under...located with...located within...
Repeat some of the letters and you can spell the following 7-letter words. addenda, andante, antenna, attuned, daunted, dentate, denuded, detente, duetted, dunnage, engaged, entente, genette, guttate, negated, nutated, tangent, tannage, tannate, taunted, tautaug, teenage, tentage, tunnage, undated, uneaten, unended, unguent, untuned