
Crane Parts

Crane Parts
A crane is only as available as its parts supply, so Kranes stocks and sources parts for cranes of every make — overhead, gantry, jib, mobile and hoist systems. That includes wire rope and chain, hooks, sheaves and blocks, brakes, motors, drives, festoon and conductor bar, controls, pendants, remotes, end trucks, wheels and limit switches. Tell us the crane, the part number or a photo of what failed, and we identify the correct replacement and return a quote with availability.
Best for Keeping any crane in service
Key specifications
About Crane Parts
Key Takeaways
- ✓Crane Parts pricing: By quote
- ✓Key features: Wire rope, hooks, sheaves & blocks, Motors, drives, brakes & controls, Festoon, conductor bar & limit switches
Parts for cranes fall into a few groups, and Kranes covers them all. Lifting and reeving parts include wire rope and chain, hooks, sheaves, blocks and drums; mechanical parts cover brakes, motors, gearboxes, wheels, bearings and end trucks; electrical parts span drives, contactors, controls, pendants, remotes, festoon, conductor bar and limit switches. Whether you call them the parts of a crane, overhead crane parts or hoist components, the same network sources them for overhead, gantry, jib, mobile and hoist systems of every make. The hard part is identification, not just supply.
Crane Parts — Configurations
Tell Kranes the crane make and model, send a part number, or photograph the worn or failed component, and we identify the correct replacement before quoting — so the part that arrives actually fits. That matters most for older equipment: when an original is obsolete and the maker has moved on, we source a compliant equivalent, so an aging but sound crane stays in service instead of being scrapped over a single unavailable part. Common wear items — wire rope, brake pads and discs, contactors, festoon, wheels and the crane hook itself — are the parts that decide a crane uptime, so they are the ones worth sourcing from a supplier who stocks rather than back-orders. Kranes returns a quote with availability and lead time up front, and pairs parts with the service to install and certify them where you need it, so a parts order does not become a second problem to schedule.
Applications
Replacing rigging and safety-critical parts is regulated work, not a swap to improvise. Kranes supplies parts rated and documented to CSA and ASME standards, and can install, load-test and certify the repair so the crane goes back to work legal and safe. Send the crane, a part number or a photo of what failed, and we respond with the right replacement, the availability and the option to fit it — keeping any crane in service across Canada.
At a glance
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Product | Crane Parts |
| Price range | By quote |
| Best for | Keeping any crane in service |
| Makes covered | All major makes |
| Operation | Operated or bare |
| Warranty | By quote |
| Compliance | CSA B167 / ASME B30 |
| Coverage | Canada-wide |
Why choose Crane Parts?
What this equipment is built to do.
Crane Parts across Canada
We design, supply, and install crane parts in major cities across all 10 provinces and 3 territories.
Questions about Crane Parts
How much does crane rental cost?
There's no honest flat rate — crane rental (or crane hire) is priced per job. The main drivers are the crane class and capacity, how long you need it (hourly, daily, weekly or by project), whether you need a certified operator, the rigging required, and site access. A small boom-truck pick costs a fraction of a multi-day mobile or tower-crane job. Rather than quote a misleading average, Kranes prices your exact lift: send the load, the radius, the lift height and the timing, and we return a clear, itemised quote within 24 hours so you can budget with confidence.
What is the 3-3-3 rule for cranes?
The 3-3-3 rule is a quick safety habit some operators use: take three seconds to start a movement smoothly, hold steady for three seconds, and take three seconds to stop — keeping loads from swinging through sudden acceleration or braking. It's a rule of thumb, not a regulation, and it never replaces a proper lift plan, load chart and the operator's judgment. On any Kranes lift, certified operators follow the manufacturer's load chart and CSA B167 practice, with the rigging and ground conditions verified before the load leaves the ground.
What does "crane services" mean?
"Crane services" covers everything around getting a load lifted safely beyond just the machine: supplying the crane (sale or rental), providing certified operators, planning and engineering the lift, rigging, and the ongoing maintenance, inspection, certification and parts that keep a crane compliant. As the nationwide supplier, Kranes covers all of it — sales, rental, service and parts — from one request. You describe the job; we provide the crane and the certified support to complete it, then keep it running afterward.
What is the difference between a gantry crane and an overhead crane?
Both run a hoist along a bridge, but the support is different. An overhead (bridge) crane carries its bridge on runway beams fixed to the building structure, so it clears the floor entirely and reaches the highest hook positions. A gantry crane carries the same bridge on freestanding legs that run on floor rails or castors, so it needs no building steel and can work outdoors, in yards or anywhere a runway can't be mounted overhead. Overhead cranes suit permanent in-bay production; gantries suit flexible, portable or outdoor lifting. Kranes supplies, installs and services both.


