Masonry Magazine March 1968 Page. 4
LULL
YOUR BEST BUY
IN A HIGH LIFT!
4-wheel drive with planetary axles
and 4-wheel power steering!
Planetary type axles (Lull invention) almost completely eliminates axle failures. Eliminates chattering and "digging in" on sand or mud.
Load level and traction is maintained even if one wheel rises or drops.
46
46
Exclusive "Reach Action" permits power extension or retraction of loads up to 46" in or out at any height.
Operator can power tilt entire machine from axles up to maintain load level
Best Designed Best Engineered Best Stress Analyzed
There are more superior features built into every Lull 4D3 Series 4-wheel drive high-lift than any other machine on the market... features that have been been proved in the field... features that enable you to lift bigger loads higher, safer, and more economically!
Check them over carefully, then see your Lull Dealer for complete details if you want to buy or rent a high-lift that keeps going longer on the job!
* Lifetime guaranteed double acting hydraulic cylinders-power up and down.
* Revers-O-Matic transmission with Torque Converter Drive-4 speeds forward and reverse.
* Powered by heavy duty Model 32 Chrysler industrial engines (diesel available).
* Four wheel drive (with planetary axles), 4 wheel power steering and 4 wheel power brakes.
* Strongest lift arms and least number of wearing parts of any machines in their class.
* 13:00 x 24 industrial tires all around for improved traction and flotation.
* Vickers hydraulic control valves and pumps for increased reliability, the best valves, pumps, steering boosters in the world.
* Craftsmanship backed by over 30 years experience as the leading manufacturer of high-lifts... the only manufacturer that builds machines that lift to 40 feet
See your Lull dealer or write today for information.
LULL
for over 30 years
ENGINEERING COMPANY, INC.
Dept. M 3045 Highway 13, St. Paul, Minnesota 55111
BOOK MART
Legal Pitfalls in Architecture, Engineering, and Building Construction by Nathan Walker, Partner, Walker and Walker, Attorneys at Law; and Theodor K. Rohdenburg, Columbia University. 260 pages plus index; 6 x 9; McGraw-Hill: $11.95. Publication date: January, 1968.
Legal Pitfalls in Architecture, Engineering, and Building Construction, designed to make the practicing architect, engineer, or building contractor aware of the common legal pitfalls that have entrapped others in those professions, explains legal principles in nonlegal terms through the use of a large number of examples and cases. Special forms are included to enable the reader to have a better understanding of the legal problems being discussed, and additional special forms which will be found most useful are included at the back of the book.
The book, coauthored by a lawyer and an architect, reflects the knowledge and experience associated with each of these fields. It stresses the importance of written agreements stipulating all contingencies, with reference to compensation, cost limitations, and professional duties; discusses the responsibility of the architect to the public; and supplies information on license requirements.
After detailing the legal pitfalls occurring in the owner-architect relationship, Legal Pitfalls in Architecture, Engineering, and Building Construction considers legal pitfalls in the owner-contractor relationship, with particular attention to contracts, standards of performance, and liability. The contractor's liability to the public is also discussed.
Other topics covered include: legal pitfalls arising out of the relationships of several contractors; arbitration; liens and bonds; special contract provisions; partnerships; and consultant situations.
Legal citations are not included in the text, but are relegated to an appendix of case references. Instead of architecture, engineering, and building construction, there have been selected those legal problems which most frequently crop up in the daily lives of the architect, engineer, and contractor. Legal principles are not explained by a profusion of legal cases, but by one or two simple, interesting, and practical illustrations which can readily be remembered by the average reader.
(continued on page 29)
masonry
March, 1968