How Reeling Cable Requirements Differ Between STS, RTG, and RMG Cranes?

In order to keep the loading process going, port cranes employ a crucial yet underrated part, which is the reeling cable. Port cranes present an extremely challenging operating environment for cables. As opposed to the wiring used in factories, the cable of a container crane operates under constant motion, rapid acceleration, physical strain, and extreme weather conditions.
Although both STS, RTG, and RMG cranes operate on containers, there is a substantial difference in how they operate, travel, and endure stress from a purely engineering standpoint. Employing a random cable that ignores the unique engineering aspects of each type of crane usually leads to cable breakdowns, unnecessary terminal downtime, and increased expenses for maintenance.
Silhouette of a tower crane against a bright, cloudy sky at sunset, with a highway overpass in the background.

Understanding How Each Crane Uses Reeling Cable

In order to determine which cable structure should be used, it is crucial to consider the exact conditions in which each crane operates in its actual applications.

1. STS Cranes: Long Travel and Marine Exposure

The Ship-to-Shore (STS) cranes are placed close to the quay and are the main devices for loading and unloading gigantic containers of ships. The dimensions of the STS cranes create huge travel distances. While the trolley moves from side to side on the boom, as well as when the entire crane moves on the track, the reeling cable is constantly wound and unwound over long distances.
In addition, the STS cranes work in the direct proximity of marine environment conditions. The cranes operate under the influence of sea spray, high humidity in the coastal area, intense UV irradiation, and strong wind forces.
On an STS crane, the main reeling cable works in tandem with another critical component: the spreader cable. While the reeling cable delivers medium-voltage power and main control data along the horizontal travel paths of the crane, the spreader cable (or basket cable) manages the vertical travel, dropping directly down to the spreader tool that locks onto the containers. Both must survive synchronized, high-speed movement, but the reeling cable bears the brunt of long-distance tension and environmental weathering.

2. RTG Cranes: Frequent Movement Across Container Yards

Rubber-Tyred Gantry (RTG) cranes operate within the container storage yard, organizing blocks of containers and loading internal terminal tractors. Because they run on heavy rubber tires rather than fixed steel rails, RTG cranes possess the unique capability to change container blocks and navigate varying terminal terrain.
This mobility requires a very distinct operating cycle. RTG cranes undergo frequent acceleration and deceleration over shorter, highly repetitive cycles throughout the day. Because they lack a permanent fixed-rail power line, mobile power supply systems for electric RTG (E-RTG) modernizations rely heavily on cable reels to plug into yard power boxes. This results in a significantly higher number of winding and unwinding cycles over 24 hours compared to many other crane types. The cable must constantly adapt to rapid changes in directional movement and minor misalignments caused by uneven yard pavement.

3. RMG Cranes: Fixed Routes and Automated Operations

While RMG cranes play an identical role in yard stacking operations as RTG cranes, they do so by traveling on rail-mounted steel structures, thereby guaranteeing their absolutely linear and highly predictable travel route.
Due to this kind of predictability in terms of structure, RMG cranes are used almost exclusively in fully automated terminal operations. As such, they often find application as part of the ASC system, with operators performing all of their activities without direct human supervision during all hours of the day. Because human operators are not present within the driver's cabin to observe any mechanical issues or shifts in cable tension, automation in the case of RMG requires perfectly accurate data and controls transmission at all times.

Key Reeling Cable Requirements for STS, RTG, and RMG Cranes

Because the working conditions differ so vastly, the performance specifications of the cable must match the primary stress factors of each crane. The table below highlights these core engineering differences:
Feature / Requirement
STS Cranes
RTG Cranes
RMG Cranes
Primary Stress Mode
High tensile loads & extreme environmental weathering
Continuous high-frequency bending & torsional twisting
High-speed data integrity & uninterrupted duty cycles
Travel Distances
Very long horizontal travel distances
Short to medium distances, high cycle rates
Medium to long fixed-track linear travel
Environmental Threat
Salt spray, coastal winds, heavy UV exposure
Industrial dust, pavement heat, oil residues
General outdoor conditions, strict mechanical consistency
Automation Priority
Medium to High
Low to Medium
Exceptionally High (PLC, sensors, vision systems)
Critical Cable Attribute
Reinforced core tensile strength & robust outer sheath
Torsion-resistant braid & superior flexibility
Integrated fiber optics & perfect electromagnetic shielding

Why STS Cranes Need Stronger Tensile and Corrosion Resistance

The sheer weight of the cable over long horizontal runs on an STS crane generates massive tensile loads. Pulling hundreds of meters of heavy copper wire at travel speeds that can reach 240 meters per minute puts immense physical strain on the cable core. Therefore, cables specified for STS cranes require a reinforced construction—often utilizing a central aramid or Kevlar strength member—to absorb mechanical tension and prevent the copper conductors from stretching.
Equally critical is chemical defense. The outer sheath must be composed of specialized compounds, such as heavy-duty polyurethane (PUR) or chlorinated polyethylene (CPE), that will not degrade when saturated with salt water or cracked by constant UV exposure. A compromised outer jacket allows moisture to penetrate, leading to internal corrosion and catastrophic electrical shorts.

Why RTG Cranes Demand Superior Flexibility and Bending Performance

For an RTG crane, the primary enemy is mechanical fatigue rather than sheer pulling tension. Because the cable undergoes thousands of short winding cycles every week, the conductors experience extreme bending stress. Standard wire strands will quickly suffer from work hardening, leading to conductor fatigue and internal copper breakage.
Additionally, because rubber-tired cranes can experience slight swaying or crabbing as they drive across pavement, the cable is subject to rotational twisting. This requires a highly torsion-resistant design. Quality RTG cables utilize an anti-torsion braid—typically made of high-strength textile threads firmly embedded between the inner and outer sheaths. This design locks the internal architecture in place, preventing the individual cores from migrating or twisting into a "corkscrew" shape, which is a typical cause of premature cable failure in RTG applications.

Why RMG Cranes Prioritize Stable Control and Communication

In automated RMG environments, the primary engineering focus shifts from raw physical strength to signal perfection. Automated cranes rely on a constant stream of data from programmable logic controllers (PLCs), laser position sensors, and safety cameras to execute precise container moves.
To handle this massive volume of data without interference from adjacent medium-voltage power cores, modern RMG reeling cables prioritize fiber optic integration. Combining single-mode or multi-mode fiber optic elements directly into the center of the power cable ensures that control commands travel at the speed of light without electromagnetic distortion. If signal stability fails for even a millisecond due to poor cable construction, safety interlocks will trip, shutting down the crane and harming overall terminal throughput.
Low-angle view of a bright yellow industrial crane arm against a clear blue sky. The assembly features a large spoked cable reel wound with silver wire, several pulleys, and a white rectangular work light.

Practical Selection Tips for Port Crane Operators

When selecting or specifying a containercrane cableavoiding generalized data sheets and focusing on real-world variables will significantly extend service life.

1. Match Cable Design to Crane Duty Cycle

Do not buy a cable based solely on current electrical loads. You must evaluate the actual operating hours and calculate the estimated annual reeling cycles. If a yard crane is transitioning from a manual, low-throughput operation to a high-capacity or semi-automated schedule, the cable construction must be upgraded to handle the increased physical wear and future workload growth.

2. Consider Both Power Transmission and Control Signals

As the proper size of the power core ensures that it will not overheat, it is equally important to ensure that the control cores and data requirements have been identified in advance. In cases where there is a remote monitoring or automation function involved, it might be necessary to use optical fiber technology to prevent loss of the control signals.

3. Do Not Overlook Environmental Conditions

A cable that works flawlessly in a dry, temperate climate may fail within months in an equatorial port subject to high-temperature regions and heavy rainfall, or a northern port facing sub-zero winter temperatures. Ensure the chemical compound of the outer sheath matches local challenges, including exposure to industrial pollution, coal dust, or hydraulic oils common in busy terminal yards.

4. Work With Real Operating Conditions Instead of Generic Specifications

Field experience across global container terminals reveals three critical truths for maintenance engineers:
  • Bending overloading: Many cable failures originate from underestimated bending stress and rotational torsion rather than electrical overload.
  • Reel geometry matters: An incorrect drum design, poor tension tracking, or an insufficient bending radius will rapidly shorten cable service life regardless of how expensive the cable was.
  • Movement pattern alignment: Matching the internal cable construction to the crane's actual movement pattern—such as long linear pulls versus rapid, short-cycle reeling—is usually far more important than simply increasing the conductor size.

Conclusion

Though they may look similar from the outside, STS, RTG, and RMG cranes place completely different mechanical, environmental, and operational demands on their reeling cable systems.
By moving away from generic specifications and selecting a specialized reeling cable based on the actual crane duty conditions, port operators can drastically improve machinery reliability, prevent unexpected downtime, and secure lower long-term maintenance costs. Hebei-Huatong provides reliablecrane cable solutions. Feel free to contact us if you need to upgrade cables for your port crane.

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about HEBEI- HUATONG

Founded in 1993, Hebei-Huatong  is a global cable manufacturing enterprise with production facilities located in Tangshan (Hebei Province, China), Busan (South Korea), Panama, Kazakhstan, Tanzania, Cameroon, and Angola. Its core product portfolio includes submersible pump cables for oil extraction, flexible moving cables for harbor cranes, cUL/CSA listed cables for AI PDU and marine shipboard cables. The company provides robust support for the continuous, safe, and efficient operation of industrial sectors worldwide, including offshore and onshore oil & gas exploration, and material handling via port cranes.

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