If you’ve spent time around riggers and maintenance crews, you already know: a good hsh lever hoist can save a day’s work (and your back). I’ve watched these tools haul, tension, and inch loads into place in some frankly ridiculous spots—up towers, inside cramped plant rooms, and underneath corroded steelwork at midnight.
Two themes keep popping up: lighter frames without losing safety margins, and corrosion resistance for coastal/chemical sites. There’s also a quiet shift toward stricter compliance—EN 13157 and ASME B30.21 aren’t just brochures anymore; buyers ask for certificates by name. Honestly, that’s a good thing.
| Model | WLL | Standard Lift | Load Chain | Lever Length | Proof / Min. Break | Net Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSH 0.75 | 0.75 t | 1.5 m (customizable) | G80 alloy, Ø6–7 mm | ≈ 280 mm | 1.5× / ≥4× WLL | ≈ 7.2 kg |
| HSH 1.5 | 1.5 t | 1.5 m (2–6 m options) | G80 alloy, Ø8 mm | ≈ 410 mm | 1.5× / ≥4× WLL | ≈ 10.5 kg |
| HSH 3.0 | 3.0 t | 1.5 m (long lifts on request) | G80 alloy, Ø10 mm | ≈ 460 mm | 1.5× / ≥4× WLL | ≈ 20 kg |
Notes: proof load and breaking load per EN 13157; data are typical—real-world use may vary with rigging and environment.
Frame and gear steel are heat-treated (think 20Mn2/40Cr families), with G80 alloy load chain and forged hooks with safety latches. Teeth are CNC-cut, then induction hardened; chains are shot-peened and proof tested. Every unit sees 1.5× WLL proof load, hook throat opening checks, and brake slippage testing. Typical service life ≈ 8–12 years with basic lubrication and annual inspection.
Certifications: ISO 9001 quality system. Compliance: EN 13157 and ASME B30.21. Environmental options: anti-corrosion coatings for coastal sites.
| Vendor | Chain Grade | Testing | Customization | After-sales |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QY Juli (HSH Lever block) | G80, traceable heat codes | 100% proof load + brake test | Lift, hooks, coatings, ratchet | Free core-component replacement |
| Generic Import | G80 (sometimes unspecified) | Batch testing | Limited | Standard warranty |
Policy details available on request; normal wear and misuse excluded.
Shipyard, East Asia: Two techs used a 1.5 t unit for hatch hinge alignment at low tide—tight angles, zero headroom. The ratchet brake held steady under shock, and the job finished an hour early. “Smooth pawl action,” they said, “no creep.”
Telecom tower retrofit: A 0.75 t hsh lever hoist with extended lift handled panel swaps in crosswinds. The lighter lever length made it less fatiguing during repetitive pulls.
Built in Donglv Industrial Zone, Donglu Township, Qingyuan District, Baoding City, Hebei Province, these units can be tailored: longer lifts, low-temp grease, stainless components for splash zones, and special hooks. And yes, engineers will tweak gearing ratios when the application demands finesse over speed.
If you’re speccing a fleet or replacing aging gear, send an email for a quick consultation—drawings, data sheets, and compliance docs are ready to go.
The hsh lever hoist is one of those quiet workhorses. When it’s built right—brake holds firm, chain feeds clean, hooks stay true—you get fewer surprises and safer lifts. That’s the whole point.



