• Wireline is the first that comes to mind, and this is an application where a machine with a long enough boom backs right up to a wellhead and supports other pieces of machinery that measure temperature, depth and pressure in an oil and gas well.
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• Coil tubing is another application where a boom truck backs right up to a wellhead, lifts a coil tubing injector, holds it on top of a well, and that device injects steel tubing down into the well to do the same thing: measure and drill.
• Commercial roofing is another industry that is particularly suited to boom trucks. A lot of these big, tall buildings that are built have flat roofs. On top of those flat roofs, they use rubber sheeting and then use boom trucks to raise gravel to the top of the buildings to hold all the material down.
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• Powerline transmission companies, utilities, and municipalities are some other sectors that also need a lot of cranes.
• The third one is artificial lift. Most people know what a pump jack is, as they’re easy to spot when driving through states like Texas, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and North Dakota. These pump jacks, rocking back and forth, are heavy components that need a lot of maintenance. So these big, strong machines are designed to do maintenance such as lift parts, assemble pump jacks, disassemble them, move them, and so forth.
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