In large construction and fabrication spaces, overhead/bridge cranes do the heavy lifting—literally. This field-tested breakdown follows the journey from bare runways to a commissioned crane ready for service. We’ll cover structural checks, safety, and QA/QC—all explained in clear, real-world language.
Overhead Crane, Defined
An overhead crane rides on parallel runways anchored to a building frame, with a trolley that travels left-right along the bridge and a hoist that lifts the load. The system delivers three axes of motion: and lift via the hoist.
You’ll find them in fabrication bays, steel plants, power stations, oil & gas shops, precast yards, and logistics hubs.
Why they matter:
Safe handling of very heavy, unwieldy loads.
Huge efficiency gains.
Lower risk during rigging, lifting, and transport inside facilities.
High throughput with fewer ground obstructions.
What This Install Includes
Runways & rails: runway girders with crane rail and clips.
End trucks: wheel assemblies that ride the rail.
Bridge girder(s): cambered and pre-wired.
Trolley & hoist: reeving, hook block, upper limit switches.
Electrics & controls: VFDs, radio remote, pendant.
Stops, bumpers & safety: end stops, buffers, travel limits.
Depending on capacity and span, the crane might be a single-girder 10-ton unit or a massive double-girder 100-ton system. The choreography is similar, but the scale, lift plans, and checks grow with the tonnage.
Pre-Install Prep
A clean install is mostly planning. Key steps:
Drawings & submittals: Freeze the GA and verify reactions with the structural team.
Permits/JSAs: Job Safety Analysis (JSA) for each lift step.
Runway verification: Survey columns and runway beams for straightness, elevation, and span.
Power readiness: Confirm conductor bars or festoon supports, cable trays, and isolation points.
Staging & laydown: Lay out slings, shackles, spreader bars, and chokers per rigging plan.
People & roles: Appoint a lift director, rigger, signaler, and electrical lead.
Millimeters at the runway become centimeters at full span. Measure twice, lift once.
Alignment That Saves Your Wheels
Runway alignment is the foundation. Targets and checks:
Straightness & elevation: Laser or total station to set rail height.
Gauge (span) & squareness: Use feeler gauges on splice bars, torque rail clips.
End stops & buffers: Verify clearances for bumpers at both ends.
Conductor system: Mount conductor bars or festoon track parallel to the rail.
Record as-built readings. Misalignment shows up as crab angle and hot gearboxes—don’t accept it.
Putting the Span in the Air
Rigging plan: Softeners protect painted flanges. Taglines for swing control.
Sequence:
Lift end trucks to runway level and set temporarily on blocks.
Rig the bridge girder(s) and make the main lift.
Land the bridge on the end trucks and pin/bolt per GA.
Measure diagonal distances to confirm squareness.
Prior to trolley install, bump-test long-travel motors with temporary power (under permit): ensure correct rotation and brake release. Re-apply LOTO once checks pass.
Cross-Travel Setup
Trolley installation: Mount wheels, align wheel flanges, set side-clearances.
Hoist reeving: Lubricate wire rope; verify dead-end terminations.
Limits & load devices: Check overload/SLI and emergency stop.
Cross-travel adjustment: Align trolley rails on a double-girder.
Pendant/remote: Install pendant festoon or pair radio receiver; function-test deadman and two-step speed controls.
A smooth trolley with a quiet hoist is a sign of good alignment. Don’t mask issues with higher VFD ramps.
Electrics & Controls
Power supply: Conductor bars with collectors or a festoon system.
Drive setup: Program VFDs for soft starts, decel ramps, and brake timing.
Interlocks & safety: Zone limits near doors or mezzanines.
Cable management: Keep loops short, add drip loops where needed.
Future you will too. If it isn’t documented, it didn’t happen—put it in the databook.
ITP, Checklists, and Sign-Off
Inspection Test Plan (ITP): Hold/witness points for rail alignment, torque, electrical polarity, limit settings.
Torque logs: Record wrench serials and values.
Level & gauge reports: Note any corrective shims.
Motor rotation & phasing: Confirm brake lift timing.
Functional tests: Jog commands, inching speeds, limits, overloads, pendant/remote range.
QA/QC is not paperwork—it’s your warranty in a binder.
Ready for Work
Static load test: Apply test weights at the hook (usually 100–125% of rated capacity per spec).
Dynamic load test: Travel long-run, cross-travel, and hoist at rated speed with test load.
Operational checks: Limit switches trigger reliably; overload trips; horn/beacon function.
Training & handover: Operator basics, daily pre-use checks, rigging do’s & don’ts.
Only after these pass do you hand over the keys.
Everyday Heavy Lifting
Construction & steel erection: handling long members safely.
Oil & gas & power: generator and turbine assembly.
Steel mills & foundries: large part transfer.
Warehousing & logistics: high throughput lanes.
Floor stays clear, production keeps flowing, and precision goes up.
Controls that Matter
Rigging discipline: dedicated signaler and stop-work authority.
Lockout/Tagout: clear isolation points for electrical work.
Fall protection & edges: scissor lifts and manlifts inspected.
Runway integrity: no cracked welds, correct bolt grades, proper grout.
Duty class selection: match crane class to cycles and loads.
Safety isn’t a stage—it's the whole show.
If It Doesn’t Run Smooth
Crab angle/drift: re-check runway gauge and tilt up construction wheel alignment.
Hot gearboxes: adjust brake air gap and reduce VFD decel.
Rope drum spooling: dress rope and reset lower limit.
Pendant lag or dropout: shield noisy VFD cables.
Wheel wear & rail pitting: add rail sweeps and check clip torque.
A 10-minute weekly check saves days of downtime later.
FAQ Snippets
Overhead vs. gantry? Choose per site constraints.
Single vs. double girder? Span and duty class usually decide.
How long does install take? Scope, bay readiness, and tonnage rule the schedule.
What’s the duty class? FEM/ISO or CMAA classes define cycles and service—don’t guess; size it right.
Why Watch/Read This
Students and pros alike get a front-row seat to precision rigging, structural alignment, and commissioning. You’ll see how small alignment wins become big reliability wins.
Looking for a clean handover databook index you can reuse on every project?
Grab the installer pack so your next crane goes in cleaner, faster, and right the first time. Save it to your site tablet for quick reference.
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