Hello everybody, this is Tony Cepeda. Today, we're going to go over the computer system for the 75-ton Arti crane, otherwise known as LMI. So, obviously, you have your measurements and all these buttons. I'm going to go over each and everything and what they do, trying to make it as fast as possible. Let's start with the screen. It's showing x one. Your x one is your reading because I'm using my whip line, so I have one part line. This little symbol indicates that I'm using the second telescopic mode. The Donald crane has two modes, first and second. The first one allows your second boom to come out first, then your third and fourth. The second mode allows your third and fourth sections to come out first, so I'm in the second mode and I have my third and fourth out first, second coming last. I have 114 feet of stick out from the basement of the boom to the tip. I have a 66-degree angle and a 44.2 radius from where I'm at to the hooks. On this Tadano crane, we're using a 12,000 pound counterweight. I have the outriggers fully extended. The weight I have on the boom tip is 2,000 pounds and some change. What I'm good for is 12,000 pounds, so that means I have 10,000 pounds that I can lift. This is a diagram basically showing where my boom is at right now. It's about one o'clock. I'm going to show you right now. My boom is right there. That's 114 feet of boom. The angle within here is 66 degrees from the base to the boom tips. 114 feet from the whip line hooks back to me is a 44-foot radius. Now we have the main block, the whip line, the...