I’ve stood under gantries in steel mills where the air tastes like iron and the clock always ticks louder at shift change. In those places, weighing has to be quick, visible, and right the first time. That’s where the ocs electronic crane scale earns its keep—born in Donglv Industrial Zone, Donglu Township, Qingyuan District, Baoding City, Hebei Province, but very much at home anywhere a hook is king.
This is a direct-view industrial crane scale with a rugged hook, wireless remote, and a capacity window from 1 to 50 tons. Minimum accuracy can reach 0.5 kg, which—if you’re tallying melt batches or loading container111s—actually matters. Many customers say they appreciate the big, legible LED and the fact it doesn’t blink under dust or glare.
| Capacity range | 1–50 t (≈ 2,200–110,000 lb) |
| Resolution / readability | down to 0.5 kg (real-world use may vary) |
| Accuracy class | meets typical OIML R76 Class III expectations |
| Display | high-brightness LED, ≈30–40 mm digits |
| Wireless remote | 433 MHz class, ≈100 m line-of-sight |
| Battery | Li‑ion, ≈6–12 Ah, up to 40–60 h typical |
| Protection / temp | IP65 housing; −10 to +40 °C (high-temp kits optional) |
| Overload | safe 120% FS; ultimate ≈400% FS |
Quick field data from a recent port deployment: on a 10 t proof load, indicated 9,995–10,005 kg across five trials (±5 kg); 10-minute creep
| Vendor | Capacity options | Lead time | Customization | Certs/standards |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QY Juli (ocs electronic crane scale) | 1–50 t | around 2–4 weeks | hooks, shackles, heat shields, data I/O | JJG 539, ISO 9001, OIML-aligned |
| Generic import | 1–20 t | stock-dependent | limited | basic CE/IP claims |
| Premium EU brand | 1–35 t | 4–8 weeks | broad, with software suites | OIML, NTEP where applicable |
The ocs electronic crane scale slots into hot metal handling (with heat shields), coil and billet logistics, container111 VGM checks, and scrap buys where “quick tare + hold” features speed things up. Options include RS‑485/Modbus or Bluetooth data, secondary remote displays, extra-long shackles, anti-heat reflectors, and printable tickets via handheld receivers.
Look for factory ISO 9001 and adherence to OIML R76 and local metrology (e.g., JJG 539). Verify IP claims (IEC 60529), do annual calibration, and keep hooks/shackles within rated geometry. And, I guess it goes without saying: never use a scale as a lifting accessory beyond its rated load.
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