
This double girder crane features box girder construction in a high heat application over a furnace. Hoist, trolley, and bridge with radio controlled Variable Frequency Drive and back-up push-button station.
|
 |

A double leg gantry with torsion box girder construction in a steel facility is shown above. Note the use of a saddle trolley hoist to maximize
lift and minimize overall crane height.
|
 |
 |

This single leg, double girder gantry has a pass-through
cantilever that allows hoist movement beyond the wall on
the left. A fully enclosed cab controls all crane functions.
|
 |

This installation at a manufacturer of roll forming
equipment consists of 15 structural girder cranes with
capacities from 1/2 to 5 tons.
There are five bridge crane runways, with lengths varying
from 70 to 250 feet. Nearly all of the cranes are used in
workstation areas.
|
 |
 |

Monobox construction allows a 95 foot span on these
ten-ton single girder cranes. Spans up to 120 feet are
possible with this design.
|
 |

Several EMH cranes are used at a Pennsylvania manufacturer of aluminum structural plate for the highway construction industry.
The cranes include a 12.5 ton double girder crane with a coil handling device, a 3.5 ton single girder crane with a sheet lifter, and a jib crane with a chain hoist and air vacuum device.
|
 |
 |

Four single girder cranes at a Midwestern mold
facility are shown here.
|
 |

A group of two, three and five ton under running cranes provides ergonomic handling of small loads at a stone fabrication plant.
|
 |
 |