Overhead Crane and Hoist Inspections
Inspections that prevent surprises and keep production moving
When This Problem Usually Shows Up
What You Are Really Trying to Avoid
Eliminate surprise breakdowns that halt production
Avoid near misses that put people at risk
Protect your credibility with leadership and safety teams
Stop working late just to make sure nothing gets missed
Stay ahead of issues instead of reacting to them
How Our Inspection Approach Is Different
What Changes When Inspections Are Done Right
- Unexpected crane and hoist failures become rare
- Emergency calls outside normal hours stop happening
- Inspection reports are read, understood, and acted on
- Leadership stops asking what is going on with the cranes
- More time is spent improving operations instead of putting out fires
Who This Service Is For
This service is a good fit if you:
- Operate overhead cranes and hoists in industrial, high use environments
- Want a long term inspection partner, not a one time checkbox
- Care about safety, reliability, and credibility with leadership
This service is not a fit if you:
- Only want a single inspection to satisfy a requirement
- Are looking only for emergency response work
- Are shopping strictly on lowest price
- Operate small portable hoists in non industrial settings
Frequently Asked Questions
How is your inspection different from a standard crane or OSHA inspection?
Most inspections focus on minimum compliance. Our inspections look beyond baseline requirements to evaluate real world performance and identify early warning signs that often lead to unplanned downtime. We focus on helping you prevent problems, not just document them.
Is this a one time inspection or an ongoing program?
This service is designed for ongoing inspection programs. While an initial inspection can stand on its own, the real value comes from consistency over time. Tracking wear trends and addressing risks early is what helps prevent surprises.
What types of cranes and facilities do you typically work with?
We primarily work with industrial facilities operating overhead cranes and hoists in demanding production environments. Manufacturing plants, processing facilities, and similar operations are a strong fit. Small portable hoists and non industrial settings are not our focus.
What happens after the inspection is completed?
You receive a clear, actionable inspection report that explains what we found, why it matters, and what should be addressed first. We review the findings with you so nothing is misunderstood or ignored and you have a clear path forward.
How do your reports help with audits and leadership reviews?
Our documentation is structured to support compliance, internal reviews, and external audits. Findings are clearly explained and prioritized so it is easy to show that risks are being actively managed, not just documented.
Will this actually help prevent unexpected breakdowns?
No inspection can prevent every failure. However, by identifying early signs of wear and risk and addressing them proactively, most clients experience fewer unplanned outages, fewer emergency calls, and more predictable crane performance.
Are your inspections compliant with OSHA and ASME standards?
Yes. Our overhead crane and hoist inspections are performed in accordance with applicable OSHA regulations and relevant ASME B30 series standards, including OSHA 29 CFR 1910.179 and applicable ASME B30 requirements for cranes, hoists, hooks, wire rope, and below the hook devices.
Compliance is built into our process and documentation. We then go further by identifying risks that minimum standards alone often do not catch, helping you stay compliant and stay ahead.
