Truck Cranes For Sale

     169 - 196 of 1,057 Listings
    High/Low/Average
    About Truck Cranes

    Available with either a lattice or telescopic boom, truck cranes are self-propelled cranes with an integrated boom, cab, outriggers, and other lifting equipment components. They are designed for use on streets and other smooth surfaces.

    Read More (About Truck Cranes)
    169 - 196 of 1,057 Listings

    Sort

    Applied Filters

    Applied Filters
    keywords
    Year
    serialNumberVIN
    Price
    Capacity
    Mileage
    Hours
    LiftHeight
    ActivationUTCDateTime

    169 - 196 of 1,057 Listings

    RentalYard LogoRent
    All
    Options

    Sort
    Drive4WD
    Location: Waterloo, Nebraska
    Seller: C-Max Inc
    Lift Capacity82 ton
    Location: Weare, New Hampshire
    Seller: SHAWMUT EQUIPMENT
    Serial Number18HA251
    Location: Pittsfield, Massachusetts
    Upper Hours248
    Location: Waterloo, Nebraska
    Seller: C-Max Inc
    Upper Hours351
    Location: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
    Lift Capacity100 ton
    Location: Sioux Falls, South Dakota
    Seller: Crane Sales & Service - Sioux Falls
    Lift Capacity140 ton
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Upper Hours9,643
    Location: Boise, Idaho
    Seller: Carmody and Associates
    Lift Capacity150 ton
    Location: Las Vegas, Nevada
    Upper Hours11,000
    Location: Boise, Idaho
    Seller: Carmody and Associates
    Serial Number28I6-5709B
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Lift Capacity250 ton
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Drive4WD
    Location: Chesapeake, Virginia
    Upper Hours14,455
    Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
    Seller: Mountain Crane
    Upper Hours0
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Serial Number38H1-0944
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Serial Number38H1-0815
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Serial Number38H0-1415
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Lift Capacity50 ton
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Upper Hours23,000
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Lift Capacity35 ton
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Upper Hours8,598
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Drive2WD
    Location: Lockport, New York
    Seller: Lake Country Truck & Equipment
    Upper Hours11,111
    Location: Temecula, California
    Seller: Carmody and Associates
    Upper Hours16,245
    Location: Santa Ana, California
    Seller: Kaplan Equipment Sales
    Lift Capacity40 ton
    Location: Phoenix, Arizona
    Seller: Mardian Equipment
    Upper Hours9,797
    Location: Fort Wayne, Indiana
    Seller: ALL Crane
    Upper Hours10,566
    Location: Chantilly, Virginia

    About Truck Cranes

    Truck cranes are wheeled mobile construction vehicles that feature a prominent boom crane used to lift, lower, and transport materials around a construction site. Unlike boom trucks, which are crane units mounted to a trailer or commercial truck’s chassis, truck cranes are purpose-built, self-propelled transports. Truck cranes also differ from all-terrain or rough-terrain mobile cranes, which are able to work in harsher environments than the hard, flat surfaces where truck cranes thrive.


    Grove TMS9000E Telescopic Boom Truck Crane

    Mobility Advantages

    The mobility and maneuverability of truck cranes allows the vehicles to drive to construction sites and handle heavy loads in confined urban areas, including destinations where the truck crane must travel on a highway. Truck cranes are often able transport their own counterweights on the carrier. Modular counterweights are often available to let operators add or remove weight as needed to best match legal transport and lifting requirements.

    Types Of Truck Cranes

    Truck cranes typically come in two types: telescopic boom truck cranes with a hydraulic telescoping boom and lattice boom truck cranes with a fixed-length boom and a folding jib. The powerful hydraulic cylinder on a telescopic boom truck allows the boom to extend or retract; their ease of setup and adaptability makes telescopic boom trucks a popular choice in construction, power and electricity, and various municipal applications. Lattice boom truck cranes are often used in situations where a mobile crane would need to handle particularly heavy loads at taller working heights, such as telecommunications towers or wind turbines, or jobs that require a longer working reach than is offered by a telescopic boom truck crane.

    Find The Right Truck Crane

    Like other types of mobile cranes, truck cranes require outriggers for added stability when working with large, heavy payloads. Load and lifting charts vary widely across the truck crane market; smaller truck cranes generally lift in the 30- to 50-ton (27- to 45-metric-ton) range, while larger, more powerful truck cranes can lift 120 t (109 mt) or more. Lifting height and working radius also vary. To extend the reach of telescopic boom truck cranes, additional jib lengths and lattice extensions are an option, and lattice truck crane booms can also be shortened or lengthened with lattice extensions.

    Grove (manufacturer of the TMS700 and TMS800 telescopic boom truck series) and Link-Belt (manufacturer of the HTC-8690 telescopic boom truck) are just a couple of the popular manufacturers of truck cranes for sale on CraneTrader. American, Kato, P & H, Samsung, and Terex truck cranes are also regularly for sale on CraneTrader.