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Best Spider Crane for Glass Installation: A Buyer's Guide by Tonnage and Job Type

Best Spider Crane for Glass Installation: A Buyer's Guide by Tonnage and Job Type

risenmega |

Buyer's Guide · Spider Cranes for Glazing & Curtain Wall · ~11 min read

Look up at almost any new commercial tower and the wall staring back at you is probably glass. Industry tracking of facade construction puts glass-based systems in roughly three out of every four commercial facade installations, and curtain wall systems now cover the majority of skyscrapers above 150 metres. That share keeps climbing every year new buildings go up.

None of that glass gets into place by hand. Somewhere between the delivery truck and the finished facade, every panel has to be lifted, carried through a live job site, and set into a frame with almost zero tolerance for error — and for a growing share of glazing contractors, the machine doing that job is a spider crane. But “a spider crane” isn’t really an answer on its own. Risenmega alone builds seven tonnage classes, each with a different boom length, footprint, and load chart, and picking the wrong one shows up later as a machine that’s too wide for the loading dock, too short on reach for the boom you need, or under-rated once you factor in working radius.

This guide breaks down exactly how to match a spider crane — and the vacuum lifter attachment that actually touches the glass — to your project. If you want the fuller picture on indoor vs. outdoor glazing equipment and vacuum lifter specifications side by side, our Ultimate Guide to Glass Curtain Wall Installation Equipment covers that ground in depth. This guide has one job: helping you land on the right machine.

The Short Answer

Shopfronts, residential glazing, single interior panes → 1–2 Ton Spider Crane — narrowest footprint (folds to 600mm), fits standard doorways and freight lifts.

Mid-rise commercial curtain wall, standard IGUs → 3–5 Ton Spider Crane — the most-ordered class for glazing contractors, up to 16.5m reach.

High-rise facades, oversized or unitized panels → 8–12 Ton Spider Crane — up to 22m boom, highest load capacity.

Every tier above 2 Ton pairs with Risenmega’s vacuum suction cup attachment (400 / 600 / 800mm cups) for direct glass handling.

Risenmega spider crane fitted with a vacuum suction cup attachment for glass panel installation
A spider crane with vacuum suction cup attachment — the pairing that has become standard on modern glazing sites.

What Actually Makes a Spider Crane “Best” for Glass Work

Before comparing models, it’s worth being specific about which features actually matter for glazing — because most of them have very little to do with raw tonnage.

Auto-leveling outriggers. Glass has almost no tolerance for vibration or lateral swing during placement. Four independently adjustable legs with one-key auto-leveling let the crane sit dead level even on a sloped slab or uneven yard — which is where most of the “steadiness” a glazing crew feels actually comes from.
Continuous 360° hydraulic slew. A panel doesn’t always sit square to the machine. Full rotation lets the operator present the glass at any angle without repositioning the whole crane — critical on a tight floor plate where every repositioning move costs time and clearance.
A folded width that clears your access route. This is the number that decides whether the crane ever makes it to the install point. Measure your narrowest doorway, corridor, or lift car before you measure anything else.
Wireless remote control. The operator should be standing at the installation point watching the panel go in — not sitting in a cab. Every Risenmega spider crane ships with radio remote control as standard.
A standard attachment interface for a vacuum lifter. Think of the crane itself as the delivery mechanism — reach, lift, rotate. The vacuum lifter mounted to it is what actually grips and fine-tunes the glass. The two need to be specified together, not chosen separately.
The right power source for the environment. Diesel for open-air sites, electric for anywhere emissions or noise are restricted — which, on most modern commercial interiors, means anywhere indoors.

Risenmega Spider Crane Lineup: Which Tonnage Fits Your Glass Project

Risenmega’s spider crane range runs from a 1-ton unit narrow enough for a single doorway to a 12-ton machine built for the heaviest unitized curtain wall panels. The table below maps each model to the glass work it’s actually suited for — use it as a starting point, then confirm against your panel’s certified weight using the estimate method further down this guide.

Model Max Lift Max Height Folded L×W×H Standard Engine Best Glass Application
1 Ton 1,000 kg 8 m 2260×600×1470mm Honda GX390 (9.6kW) Residential windows, single interior panes, sub-600mm access
2 Ton 2,000 kg 8 m 2780×710×1620mm Honda 390cc (10kW) Small storefronts, boutique retail glazing
3 Ton 3,000 kg 10.5 m 3450×950×1700mm Changchai EV80 (12kW) Low-rise commercial facades, standard double-glazed units
5 Ton 5,000 kg 16.5 m 4650×1400×2160mm YN 25GB (37kW) Mid-rise curtain wall, atrium glazing, larger IGUs
8 Ton 8,000 kg 17.5 m 5010×1600×2200mm YN 27GBZ (58kW) Heavier unitized panels, larger skylight/atrium glass
10 Ton 10,000 kg 20 m 5550×1850×2300mm YN 27GBZ (58kW) Large-format high-rise unitized panels
12 Ton 12,000 kg 22 m 6050×1850×2300mm Changchai (65kW) Heaviest oversized panels, structural glazing, large skylights
All models are also available in electric or hybrid configuration on request — the engines above reflect the standard build. Request a configuration sheet →
⚠ One number to check before you order: rated capacity drops sharply with reach. Across Risenmega’s range, maximum lift (3,000–12,000kg) applies at a working radius of about 1.5m; extend the boom to its full 8.5m standard outreach and capacity falls to roughly 600–2,700kg. Always check the load chart at the radius you’ll actually be working at — not just the headline tonnage on the spec sheet.
Risenmega 5 ton spider crane with 16.5 meter boom used for mid-rise glazing and curtain wall installation
The 5 Ton class is Risenmega’s most-ordered model for mid-rise commercial glazing.

Pairing the Right Vacuum Lifter Attachment

A spider crane on its own lifts with a hook or basket. For glass specifically, you need Risenmega’s Spider Crane Lift and Vacuum Suction Cups attachment, built to mount to the 2–12 ton range. It brings a ±80° rotating aluminum platform, one-key leveling on the base machine’s outriggers, and a 360° rotary turntable — with the suction head itself available in three sizes: 400mm, 600mm, and 800mm cups.

Larger cup diameter means more contact area against the glass, which generally makes it the better fit for larger or heavier individual panes; smaller cups suit standard-size units where maneuverability within a tighter grid matters more. Exact safe working load depends on your cup count, size, and the glass surface itself — Risenmega’s team will confirm the configuration against your specific panel spec before you order.

Safety note: the vacuum lifter’s rated capacity is never separate from the crane’s own lift chart. The lower of the two numbers, at your actual working radius, is what governs the lift — not whichever figure looks better on the spec sheet.

How to Estimate the Capacity You Actually Need

Before you can pick a tonnage, you need a working figure for panel weight. For a single sheet of monolithic or laminated glass, the standard industry approximation is straightforward:

Quick Estimate Formula
Weight (kg) ≈ Panel Area (m²) × Thickness (mm) × 2.5
Example: a 2m × 1.2m pane at 10mm thickness → 2.4 m² × 10 × 2.5 = 60 kg

This works for single sheets. It does not work for insulated (double or triple-glazed) unitized curtain wall panels, which add a second or third lite, an air gap, and an aluminum frame — completed units on high-rise projects regularly exceed 1,000–1,500kg even though the glass itself is a fraction of that weight. For unitized panels, always request the certified panel weight from your glazing supplier rather than estimating, and size the crane and vacuum lifter with a safety margin above that figure, not against it.

Diesel, Electric, or Hybrid: Choosing the Right Powertrain

Every Risenmega tonnage class is available across all three power options — the right one depends entirely on where the crane will be working.

Diesel

Best for open-air sites with no emissions restriction. Yanmar/Kubota-class engines, EU Stage V compliant, typically 8–10 hours of running time per tank.

Electric

The default for indoor glazing — atriums, interior partitions, occupied-building retrofits. Zero exhaust emissions, near-silent operation, roughly 6–8 hours per charge. Increasingly a contractual requirement, not just a preference, on commercial interior fit-outs.

Hybrid

Switches between the two for effectively unlimited runtime — useful where a single job moves between indoor and outdoor phases.

Close-up of Risenmega's vacuum suction cup lifter attachment for spider cranes, available in 400, 600 and 800mm cup sizes
The vacuum suction cup attachment mounted and ready for panel handling.

Certifications & Safety Standards to Verify Before You Buy

Anywhere the crane is entering the EU or UK, CE marking under the Machinery Directive is non-negotiable — it’s what lets the equipment legally go to site. Mobile and crawler cranes as a category are typically assessed against EN 13000, the harmonized European design-safety standard for mobile cranes; in the US, OSHA’s construction crane rule (29 CFR 1926 Subpart CC) points back to the ASME/ANSI B30.5 consensus standard for crawler cranes specifically. Whichever region you’re shipping to, ask your supplier which standard their documentation actually references — “CE certified” on its own is a starting point, not the full picture.

What Risenmega provides with every spider crane order:

CE Certificate ISO 9001 SGS Inspection Report MSDS Report UN38.3 Test Report

Ask for the actual documents — not just the badges — before final payment.

Why Glazing Contractors Keep Switching to Spider Cranes

The shift isn’t really about lifting power — traditional mobile and tower cranes out-lift any spider crane on the market. It’s about everything around the lift. Industry reporting on glazing crews consistently points to the same pattern: where a conventional glass install might need six to eight people — a crane operator, a signal person, and multiple tag-line holders to control a swinging panel — a spider crane paired with a vacuum lifter typically needs two: one on the crane, one guiding the panel into the frame. That’s fewer people standing under a suspended load, less reliance on hand signals across a noisy site, and a panel that’s mechanically held rather than muscled into position.

It also changes what’s logistically possible. No large exclusion zone, no street-closure permit, no multi-tonne outrigger footprint to clear with the site engineer — which is a large part of why major global curtain wall contractors have adopted mini and spider cranes for skyscraper glazing projects worldwide, working from the floor being glazed rather than staging everything from ground level with a tower crane.

Frequently Asked Questions

What size spider crane do I need to install glass panels?

It depends on your panel weight and working reach, not just the glass type. As a rule of thumb: single panes and residential glazing usually fall in the 1–3 ton range, mid-rise commercial curtain wall typically needs 3–5 tons, and high-rise or unitized panels often require 8–12 tons once you account for reach at height. Use the estimate formula above to get a working figure, then confirm against your supplier’s certified panel weight before finalizing.

Can a spider crane lift glass indoors?

Yes — this is actually one of the main reasons contractors choose spider cranes over larger equipment. An electric spider crane produces zero exhaust emissions and runs quietly enough for occupied buildings, and its narrow folded width lets it travel through standard doorways, corridors, and freight lifts to reach interior atriums, lobbies, and partition walls that a diesel machine or tower crane could never access.

Is a “spider crane” the same thing as a “mini crane”?

Functionally, yes. “Spider crane,” “mini crane,” and “mini crawler crane” all describe the same category of compact, tracked lifting machine with four extendable outrigger legs — the terminology just varies by region and manufacturer. All of them are distinct from truck-mounted mobile cranes and fixed tower cranes, which don’t fold down for tight-access work.

Does the crane come with a vacuum lifter, or do I need to order it separately?

A base spider crane ships configured for hook or basket lifting. For glass work specifically, you’ll want to add Risenmega’s vacuum suction cup attachment — available in 400, 600, and 800mm cup sizes — which mounts to the crane’s lifting point and gives you the direct panel contact, tilt, and rotation control that glass installation actually requires.

How much doorway clearance does a spider crane need?

Risenmega’s range folds down to between 600mm and roughly 1,850mm wide depending on tonnage — the 1 and 2 ton models are narrow enough for most standard doorways (typically 800–900mm), while the heavier 8–12 ton models need a wider access route or outdoor deployment. Always measure your tightest doorway, corridor, or lift car before selecting a model.

How long does shipping take, and can I combine a spider crane with other equipment?

Typical lead time is 25–45 days from deposit to port, shipped FOB, CIF, or DDP door-to-door from Qingdao. If you’re also sourcing a vacuum lifter, scissor lift, or forklift, Risenmega can consolidate multiple products into a single container, which cuts freight cost and simplifies your import paperwork to one shipment and one set of documents.

Ready to Spec the Right Spider Crane for Your Glazing Project?

Send us your panel dimensions and certified weight, site access constraints, and preferred power source — we’ll recommend the tonnage and vacuum lifter configuration and get a full spec sheet and quote back to you within 24 hours.

Get a Spider Crane Quote → Browse the Full Range

Related reading: The Ultimate Guide to Glass Curtain Wall Installation Equipment · Vacuum Glass Lifter for Curtain Wall: A Buyer’s Guide · Spider Crane Guide 2025