Passenger Hoist Installation Guide — Complete Step-by-Step Process
Installing a passenger hoist correctly is as important as choosing the right model. A poorly installed hoist — even a CE-certified unit — is a safety risk and a source of constant operational problems. This guide covers every phase of passenger hoist installation on Indian construction sites, from site survey to first passenger use.
Phase 1 — Site Survey and Pre-Installation Planning
Before any equipment arrives on site, a thorough site survey must be completed by a trained installation engineer.
Site Position Selection
The hoist mast is typically positioned 3 to 3.5 metres from the building’s outer edge. When selecting the exact position, evaluate:
- Anchor points — Wall ties must anchor into structural concrete or steel — never into brickwork, facade panels, or finishing elements
- Foundation ground conditions — The base frame sits on a concrete pad; soil bearing capacity must be sufficient
- Access clearance — Workers and materials must be able to approach the base landing door without obstruction
- Overhead clearance — Clear vertical space for the mast to rise as the building grows
- Power supply proximity — Three-phase 415V supply required near the base; cable routing must be planned
- Drainage — The base area must be graded so rainwater does not pool around the foundation
Foundation Design
The concrete foundation pad must be designed for the specific hoist model’s base load — including the dynamic loads generated during operation. Key requirements:
- Minimum concrete grade: M20
- Foundation dimensions: Typically 3.5 m × 3.5 m × 0.3 m minimum (varies by model)
- Anchor bolts: Cast into foundation — position must match base frame precisely
- Curing time: Foundation must cure for minimum 7 days before base frame installation
- Level tolerance: Foundation surface must be level within ±5 mm
Never place the foundation on fill soil, loose aggregate, or uncompacted ground. The dynamic loads from a 2,000 kg hoist at 96 m/min are significant.
Phase 2 — Base Frame and Initial Mast Installation
Step 1: Install Base Frame
- Position base frame on foundation pad, aligning with cast-in anchor bolts
- Level the frame in both directions — use precision level, not visual estimate
- Tighten anchor bolts to specified torque (refer to installation manual)
- Install landing door frame at base level
- Connect base drainage if specified
Critical: Even a 2–3 mm misalignment at the base compounds to 50+ mm deviation at 100 metres height. Take the time to get this right.
Step 2: Erect First Mast Sections
- Lift first mast section onto base frame using a crane or the building’s tower crane
- Check vertical alignment with plumb bob or laser level
- Bolt mast section to base frame connections — tighten to specified torque
- Install guide roller assembly on mast
- Erect 3–4 additional mast sections to working height
- Check vertical alignment again — correct before proceeding
Step 3: Install Drive Unit and Cage
- Lift drive unit (motor, gearbox, pinion assembly) onto mast
- Connect drive unit to mast guide system — check all roller clearances
- Mount cage onto drive unit — connect all mechanical connections
- Install cage door and interlock mechanism
- Check cage level — adjust guide rollers until cage floor is level ±3 mm
Phase 3 — Electrical Installation
Power Supply Requirements
| Hoist Capacity | Power Supply Required |
|---|---|
| 700–1,200 kg (single cage) | 3-phase, 415V, 32A minimum |
| 1,500–2,000 kg (single cage) | 3-phase, 415V, 63A minimum |
| Twin cage configurations | 3-phase, 415V, 100A minimum |
- All electrical work must be done by a licensed electrician
- Use weatherproof cable containment — IP54 minimum for outdoor runs
- Earth bonding of all metal parts is mandatory
- RCCB (residual current circuit breaker) protection required on all circuits
- Control voltage: 24V DC (standard on modern PLCs)
Control Panel Installation
- Mount VFD control panel in weatherproof enclosure near base
- Connect motor cables — verify phase rotation before first run
- Connect all limit switch cables
- Connect door interlock cables
- Connect overload sensor cables
- Set VFD parameters per manufacturer specification — never use default settings
Phase 4 — Wall Tie Installation
Wall ties (mast anchors) are the most critical structural element of a tall hoist installation. They prevent the mast from deflecting under load and wind.
Wall Tie Spacing Rules
| Mast Height | Maximum Tie Spacing |
|---|---|
| First tie | Maximum 6 m from base |
| Subsequent ties | Every 6–9 m (refer to manufacturer specification) |
| Above the highest tie | Maximum 6 m free-standing height |
Never leave more than 6 metres of unsupported mast above the last wall tie. This is the most common installation error and the most dangerous.
Wall Tie Anchor Requirements
- Anchor into structural concrete columns, beams, or floor slabs only
- Use manufacturer-supplied anchor bolts — minimum M16 grade 8.8
- Anchor embedment: Minimum 100 mm into concrete
- Pull-out test: Each anchor must be tested to minimum 2× working load before the tie is put into service
- Anchor into masonry, blockwork, or facade panels is not acceptable under any circumstances
Phase 5 — Landing Doors at Upper Floors
Each floor where the hoist stops requires a landing door. Landing door installation:
- Position landing door frame to align with cage door — horizontal alignment within 10 mm
- Anchor landing door frame to structural slab or beam — not partition walls
- Connect interlock wiring to main control system — door cannot be bypassed
- Install anti-fall barrier across opening when landing door is being installed (before interlock is active)
- Test interlock operation before allowing any access
Phase 6 — Pre-Commissioning Tests
No worker should set foot in the hoist until all of the following tests are completed and documented:
Mandatory Pre-Commissioning Test Sequence
1. Visual Inspection Full visual check of all mechanical connections, electrical connections, mast alignment, wall tie anchors, and cage condition.
2. No-Load Run Test Run the hoist through full travel — up and down — with no load. Check for unusual vibration, noise, or jerking. Verify all limit switches activate at correct positions.
3. 110% Dynamic Load Test Load cage to 110% of rated capacity (use calibrated dead weights — not personnel). Run full travel up and down. Check all guide rollers, drive unit, and rack engagement. Record observations.
4. 125% Static Load Test Load cage to 125% of rated capacity. Hold for 10 minutes. Inspect all structural connections, mast sections, and wall ties for any sign of deflection or distress.
5. Overspeed Governor Test Mechanically actuate the governor to simulate overspeed. Verify emergency brake engages and holds the cage within specified stopping distance.
6. Emergency Stop Test Activate emergency stop at various points during travel. Verify cage stops smoothly without rebound.
7. Power Failure Simulation Isolate main power supply during travel. Verify cage stops and holds position. Test manual rescue lowering procedure from maximum height.
8. All Door Interlock Tests Open each landing door and cage door individually during operation. Verify hoist stops immediately in each case. Verify hoist will not start with any door open.
9. Overload Test Apply load 5% above rated capacity. Verify overload sensor prevents cage from moving.
All tests must be witnessed, recorded, and signed by the installation engineer and site safety officer. The documentation must be kept on site.
Phase 7 — Operator Training
Before first passenger use, the designated hoist operator must be trained by a manufacturer-certified trainer in:
- Normal operating procedure
- Daily inspection checklist
- Emergency stop procedures
- Manual rescue lowering procedure
- Refusal of overloaded cage procedure
- Incident reporting procedure
The operator’s training record must be kept on site.
Common Installation Mistakes to Avoid
| Mistake | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Foundation not fully cured before installation | Settlement, misalignment, structural failure |
| Base frame not precisely levelled | Mast deviation, guide roller wear, vibration |
| Wall ties anchored into masonry | Tie failure under wind or dynamic load |
| Wall tie spacing exceeded | Mast deflection, structural failure at height |
| Pre-commissioning tests skipped | Undetected safety defects, legal liability |
| Power phase rotation unchecked | Hoist runs in wrong direction — crash into upper limit |
| Overload sensor disabled | Structural overload, drive failure |
Installation Timeline (Typical)
| Phase | Duration |
|---|---|
| Foundation preparation and curing | 7–10 days |
| Base frame and initial mast (0–30 m) | 2–3 days |
| Electrical installation | 1 day |
| Pre-commissioning tests | 1 day |
| Operator training | 0.5 day |
| Total base installation | 12–17 days |
After base installation, additional mast sections are added as the building rises — typically 1 to 2 sections per working day, added by the hoist’s own lifting mechanism without external craneage.
Need Professional Installation Support?
A correct installation by a trained team is the single best investment you can make for hoist safety and reliability. Attempting to install a passenger hoist with an untrained team to save cost invariably leads to misalignment, premature wear, safety device failures, and costly remediation.
Contact Us for Installation Support and Free Site Survey → View Passenger Hoist Models and Specifications →