An overhead crane, commonly called a bridge crane, is a type of crane found in industrial environments.
There, Ms. Kobrin found an industrial relic: a bridge crane, two I-beams with a wheeled device to transport machinery across the loft.
A bridge crane swung across the setting sun.
Almost all paper mills use bridge cranes for regular maintenance requiring removal of heavy press rolls and other equipment.
A bridge crane used to service the generators remains intact.
The types of cranes engineered include bridge cranes, gantry cranes, monorails, and custom configurations.
Ladles are moved by overhead bridge cranes to the casting machines which can handle two at a time.
The world's largest bridge crane, capable of lifting the dome of the reactor containment building was purchased for $17 million and installed across the basin.
The NSC design includes two bridge cranes suspended from the arches.
About 60 electric motors worked bridge cranes, fans, elevators, refrigerators and auxiliary machinery.