Inspection intervals, replacement costs, and safety compliance for CD1, MD1, and European-type wire rope hoists on overhead cranes.
Published July 5, 2026 | By Zhang Fei, Senior Service Engineer at SIEC Cranes
Electric hoists on overhead cranes need regular maintenance. Skip the inspections and you risk downtime, surprise replacement bills, or a hoist failure when there is a load underneath. This guide covers what to check, when to check it, what a replacement costs, and how to choose between repairing and changing out the whole unit. Based on what we have seen in the field across 200+ crane installations in Europe, the Middle East and Southeast Asia.
Maintenance intervals depend on duty class, not just the calendar. A hoist running one shift in a warehouse does not need the same frequency as one running three shifts in a steel mill. Here is the schedule we follow at SIEC:
| Interval | What to Check | Est. Service Cost (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Daily | Visible wire rope damage, hook latch, unusual noise, brake function (test lift 200 mm then stop) | Internal (5 min) |
| Weekly | Limit switch operation, pendant/cable condition, oil leaks, bolt torque on trolley mounting | Internal (15 min) |
| Monthly | Brake lining wear, wire rope lubrication, electrical connections, overload device functional test | USD 150–250 |
| Quarterly | Detailed brake inspection (disassemble, measure lining), hook crack test (MPI), rope diameter measurement | USD 300–500 |
| Annual | Full teardown inspection: gearbox oil change, motor insulation test, bearing replacement, control panel check | USD 800–2,000 |
| Every 500 hrs | Same as annual — applies to heavy-duty hoists on FEM 3m+ duty | USD 800–2,000 |
From what we see in the field, about 35% of hoist failures could have been caught by a monthly inspection. The usual suspects are brake wear, limit switches drifting out of alignment, and wire rope degradation. Nothing exotic — all easy to catch early if you look.
If your hoist is beyond repair, here is what a replacement costs. These are ex-works prices for CD1/MD1 wire rope hoists from European-standard Chinese manufacturers like SIEC:
| Hoist Capacity | CD1 Single-Speed (USD) | MD1 Dual-Speed (USD) | Explosion-Proof (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 ton | 1,800 – 2,500 | 2,500 – 3,500 | 3,000 – 4,200 |
| 5 ton | 3,500 – 5,000 | 4,800 – 6,800 | 5,800 – 8,000 |
| 10 ton | 5,000 – 7,500 | 7,000 – 11,000 | 8,500 – 13,000 |
| 20 ton | 12,000 – 16,000 | 16,000 – 24,000 | 19,000 – 28,000 |
| 50 ton | 25,000 – 35,000 | 35,000 – 55,000 | 42,000 – 65,000 |
On-site installation adds USD 800–4,000 depending on crane type, lifting height, and site access. A hoist swap on a single girder crane in a warehouse runs on the low end. A 50-ton hoist changeout on a double girder crane in a steel mill can easily hit USD 4,000 for rigging and alignment alone.
Hoist retrofits — replacing only the hoist trolley assembly while keeping the bridge and runway — typically save 30–50% compared to a full crane replacement. For more on double girder overhead crane configurations, read our Double Girder Crane for Steel Mills guide.
This is probably the question we hear most. Our rule of thumb: if repair costs go over 60% of a new hoist price, replace it. But cost is not the only factor.
Replace when you see any of these:
Repair is the better option when:
Under FEM 9.511, ISO 12480-1 and AS 1418 standards, a thorough hoist inspection checks these items:
For explosion-proof hoists in chemical or paint shop environments, additional checks include sealed enclosure integrity, spark arrestors, and grounding resistance under 10 Ω. If you need an Ex-rated hoist, see our Wire Rope Hoist Guide for specifications.
A well-maintained wire rope hoist in a standard industrial environment lasts 15–25 years. But the real answer depends on three things: duty classification, operating hours, and environment.
SIEC hoists are rated under FEM/ISO duty classes. Here is how they map to real-world service life:
| FEM Class | ISO Class | Typical Application | Daily Hours | Expected Life Before Overhaul |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Am | M3 | Light workshop, warehouse, maintenance bay | 2–4 | 20–25 years |
| 2 m | M4 | General manufacturing, assembly lines | 4–8 | 15–20 years |
| 3 m | M5 | Steel fabrication, foundry, heavy machinery | 8–12 | 10–15 years |
| 4 m | M6 | Steel mill, continuous casting, scrap yard | 12–16 | 8–12 years |
| 5 m | M7 | Port, shipyard, bulk handling (continuous) | 16–24 | 5–8 years |
Environment plays a big role too. Hoists in dusty foundries and outdoor shipyards rust faster. The same hoist in a clean assembly hall will go years longer. For coastal and high-humidity sites, we recommend corrosion-protected models (hot-dip galvanized or epoxy) — the 10–15% price premium usually pays for itself in extended service life.
Looking at our service records, plants that run a structured maintenance program get 30–50% more life out of their hoists than those running reactive repairs. Here is what moves the needle:
For gantry crane installations in outdoor yards, additional environmental protection is critical — see our Gantry Crane for Precast Concrete Yards guide for coastal and outdoor recommendations.
Here is what we see across our customer base. Numbers are based on 2025–2026 SIEC service records for 10-ton hoists in medium-duty applications:
| Approach | Annual Cost per Hoist (USD) | Avg Unscheduled Downtime | Avg Hoist Life |
|---|---|---|---|
| Planned maintenance (quarterly + annual) | 1,800 – 3,500 | 4–8 hours/year | 18–22 years |
| Reactive repair only (run to failure) | 4,000 – 9,000 | 40–80 hours/year | 10–14 years |
Planned maintenance costs less than half of reactive repair over the hoist's life, with 5x less downtime. If you are managing a fleet of 10 hoists, the savings add up to USD 22,000–55,000 per year.
SIEC Cranes supplies CD1, MD1, European-type and explosion-proof wire rope hoists for all overhead crane types. Get in touch with our service team for inspection support or replacement hoist pricing.
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