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Rigging of an asymmetrical scaffolding piece: the lifting beam is blue, the load is attached to the beam using grey slings

The lifting beam (also known as traverse, spreader beam) is a steel beam that is attached to the hook of the crane in order to spread the slings from one end of an elongated load (like a wall panel) to another. The bottom of the beam has multiple connection points for hanging the load.[1]

H-shaped traverse

The lifting beams are used in multiple cases:[2]

  • lifting an asymmetrical load. Without a beam, it might be hard to strap the load so that its center of gravity is exactly below the hook;
  • handling a long load with a single-hook crane. Sufficient spread between the slings prevents the load from slipping out;
  • increase the headroom: slings cannot be stretched close to the horizontal direction, so attaching them directly to the hook requires a minimum distance from the hook to the load. When the lifting beam is used, the slings can be shorter, providing more vertical clearance during lifting;
  • if the attachments of the load are on its vertical sides, the slings have to go over the edges of the load, which can damage these edges. A lifting beam allows attaching slings to the side lugs without touching the edges;
  • the top of the beam can have two attachment points at the ends thus allowing two cranes to share the load.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gorse, Johnston & Pritchard 2012, p. 250, lifting beam.
  2. ^ Kulweic 1991, pp. 525–527, Lifting Beams.

Sources[edit]