{"id":1424,"date":"2026-04-07T05:10:23","date_gmt":"2026-04-07T05:10:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/planetarygeardrive.top\/?p=1424"},"modified":"2026-04-07T05:11:41","modified_gmt":"2026-04-07T05:11:41","slug":"crawler-crane-planetary-gearbox","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/planetarygeardrive.top\/es\/application\/crawler-crane-planetary-gearbox\/","title":{"rendered":"Which crawler crane planetary gearbox fits hoist, travel, or slewing?"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Heavy Lift Equipment \u00b7 Drive Systems<\/p>\n
The crawler crane planetary gearbox<\/strong> operates in three distinct positions \u2014 hoist drum drive, crawler travel drive, and slewing drive \u2014 each with fundamentally different torque, duty cycle, and load direction characteristics. A single crane may use 8\u201312 planetary gearbox units across all three positions, and each position demands a specification that reflects its actual loading rather than a blanket heavy-duty selection across all positions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n <\/p>\n Lattice boom crawler cranes \u2014 the Liebherr LR series, Manitowoc Model 18000\/21000\/31000, Kobelco CKE series, SANY SCC series \u2014 represent the highest-torque application category that commercial planetary gearboxes are used in outside of mining and cement mill drives. A 600-tonne capacity crawler crane hoist drive gearbox must sustain 200,000\u2013400,000 Nm of output torque during a full-rated lift, applied continuously for the entire duration of the hoist cycle at full hook load. There is no service factor applied to the hoist torque in crawler crane applications \u2014 the machine is designed and operated at its rated capacity as a normal operating condition, not as a peak event.<\/p>\n Understanding this distinction \u2014 that crawler crane gearboxes operate at rated torque as a normal state, not as a peak \u2014 is the foundation of correct specification. It means that the L10 bearing life must be calculated at 100% of the continuously applied load, with no derating for assumed reduced-load operation. It also means that the oil cooling system must maintain operating temperature at full rated load for the full hoist cycle duration \u2014 typically 3\u20138 minutes per lift cycle \u2014 without exceeding the oil’s rated operating temperature.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n 01<\/span><\/p>\n The crane hoist drum planetary reducer<\/strong> connects the hydraulic motor (or electric motor on newer electrically powered cranes) to the hoist drum, multiplying motor torque to produce the output torque required to lift the rated hook load at the designed reeving. The gear ratio is determined by the hoist drum diameter, the number of rope lines (reeving factor), and the motor’s rated speed at peak torque. Most large crawler crane hoist drives use 3\u20134 stage planetary reductions to achieve ratios of 50:1 to 200:1.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n 02<\/span><\/p>\n The crawler crane travel drive gearbox<\/strong> on each crawler track is a 3\u20134 stage planetary unit similar in architecture to an excavator final drive, but significantly larger \u2014 a 300-tonne capacity crane with 6-metre crawler shoes may have individual track drive gearboxes rated at 150,000\u2013200,000 Nm per side. The travel drive’s critical failure mode is different from the hoist drive: it is shock loading from terrain irregularities rather than sustained high torque.<\/p>\n When a crawler crane travels across an uneven surface with a suspended load, the track shoe crossing an obstacle creates a momentary torque spike in the travel drive as the crane’s weight redistributes. These spikes, combined with the braking torque when the travel brake engages to stop the crane on a slope, define the peak torque that the travel drive must be designed for \u2014 not the steady-state travel torque at constant ground level with no load.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n <\/p>\n 03<\/span><\/p>\n The slewing gearbox rotates the crane superstructure on its slewing ring bearing. The steady-state slewing torque is determined by the load moment and the slewing acceleration rate. However, the critical design load case for a crane slewing gearbox is often not the slewing torque itself \u2014 it is the braking torque<\/em> required to stop the slewing superstructure in wind conditions. A 600-tonne crane with a 60-metre lattice boom has a very high wind moment that the slewing gearbox must resist at standstill, even when the slewing hydraulic motor is at zero flow.<\/p>\n The slewing gearbox must therefore provide adequate static holding torque \u2014 via the integral or attached slewing brake \u2014 to resist the maximum design wind load on the crane superstructure without the motor powered. In European markets, the wind load design case is specified per EN 13001-2 at 20 m\/s wind speed in service and 40 m\/s wind speed out of service. The slewing brake must hold the boom at the out-of-service wind speed to prevent uncontrolled boom rotation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n <\/p>\nThree Drive Positions \u2014 Engineering Parameters at Each<\/h2>\n
Major Crawler Crane Models \u2014 Gearbox Drive Position Summary<\/h2>\n