Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Rigging, Overhead Lifting, Load Securement & Contractor Supplies
 
Slingmax® Heavy-Lift Wire Rope Slings Print Email
Slingmax Rigging Solutions

Quick Reference Chart of the Most Popular Heavy-Lift Wire Rope Slings

 

Parts of wire rope in body

D/d Body*

D/d Eye*

Termination of each Eye

Minimum Length

Features

Tri-Flex® sling

3

5/1

1.5/1

1 Ferrule

6' for 7/8" component wire*

Good replacement for single-strand wire rope slings

Gator-Laid® sling

9

5/1

1/1

3 Ferrules

6' for 3/4" component wire*

80% efficiency; parallel-laid eyes

Gator-Max® sling

9

5/1

1/1

Hand tuck

15' for 1/2" component wire*

80% efficiency; parallel-laid eyes

Gator-Flex® sling

9

5/1

1/1

Hand tuck

15' for 1/2" component wire*

Unwrapped eyes easy to inspect

Gator-Flex® grommet

9

5/1

N/A

Hand tuck

4' for 1/4" component wire*

Endless

   

*Ratio based on finished body diameter

*Ratio based on finished body diameter

 

*Minimum length increases as component wire size increases

 

Inspection of Slingmax® Wire Rope Slings

  1. Follow general criteria in ASME/ANSI B30.9 Chapter 9-2 “Wire Rope Slings – Selection, Use, and Maintenance”
  2. Retirement criteria: For Gator-family™ and Tri-Flex® slings of less than 9 parts, 20 broken wires per lay length means that the sling should be removed from service. For slings of 9 parts or more, 40 broken wires per lay length means that the sling should be removed from service.

Advantages: flexibility, low D/d ratios, fabrication to tight tolerance
Meets conditions specified by the Wire Rope Technical Board Sling Manual

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