In construction sites, equipment transport, or warehouse operations,
casters are often overlooked as minor accessories. Many procurement officers or engineering managers
believe that "as long as it rotates and has sufficient load capacity, they are interchangeable."
However, HAION Caster provides a professional reminder: Scaffolding casters
and industrial casters have fundamental differences in design and safety standards.
In high-load or high-risk scenarios, choosing the wrong wheel not only damages floors and
shortens equipment lifespan but may also trigger irreparable occupational safety accidents.
Below is an in-depth analysis of these differences.
I. Why are Scaffolding and Industrial Casters Easily Confused?
◆HAION Scaffolding Casters:
Engineered for "Structural Stability + Personnel Safety."
◆HAION Industrial Casters:
Born for "Object Mobility Efficiency."
II. The "Engineering Logic" Behind the 3 Major Differences
1. Stress Patterns: Static Stability vs. Dynamic Impact
Most buyers focus solely on "load capacity in kilograms," ignoring the nature of the stress:
◆Scaffolding Casters (Handling Eccentric Loads):
Personnel moving on scaffolding generate repetitive vibrations,
and the center of gravity shifts constantly. HAION Scaffolding Casters are designed to withstand
"eccentric loading" to ensure the entire structure remains stable.
◆Industrial Casters (Handling Smooth Movement):
Primarily used for carts or machinery, these are not designed to withstand intense
human-induced swaying or dynamic shifts.
2. Mounting Structure: Leveling vs. Fixed Support
◆Scaffolding Casters (Horizontal Micro-adjustment):
HAION Scaffolding Casters typically feature threaded stems or adjustable aluminum tubes.
This is not just a mounting interface; it allows for precision height adjustment to compensate
for uneven ground, ensuring the scaffold remains perfectly level.
◆Industrial Casters (Fixed Support):
Usually utilize Plate Mounting. The design rarely accounts for the "leveling requirements"
of the entire equipment structure.
3. Occupational Safety Regulations and Compliance
HAION Caster scaffolding wheels are strictly designed in accordance with the
EN 1004 safety standards for mobile access and working towers to ensure safety during
high-altitude operations. In contrast, industrial casters are specifically manufactured for
general ground equipment mobility. Since the application scope and load-bearing structures
differ between the two, they must not be used interchangeably to maintain
occupational safety at the worksite.
III. FAQ
Q1: Some industrial casters have very high load ratings.
Why can't I use them on scaffolding?
A: Load rating is only a baseline metric. HAION Scaffolding Casters pass EN 1004 testing,
meaning they can handle the "eccentric stress" and "repetitive vibrations"
caused by workers above. Industrial casters cannot guarantee structural stability
under such dynamic loads.
Q2: What happens if I install scaffolding casters on industrial warehouse equipment?
A: While they offer high safety, scaffolding casters prioritize "stability," resulting in
higher rolling resistance compared to industrial casters. Using them on warehouse carts that
require frequent movement will make them harder to push and reduce operational efficiency.
Q3: What is the difference in "Safety Factors" between the two designs?
A: According to EN 1004, the safety factor for HAION Scaffolding Casters is significantly higher
than that of standard casters. This means even with the same load rating, scaffolding casters
provide superior impact resistance and fracture protection against sudden shocks.
Q4: Is there a fundamental difference in the "Braking Systems"?
A: Yes. HAION Scaffolding Casters utilize a "Total Lock" (Double Lock) design,
which simultaneously locks the wheel rotation and the swivel head.
This ensures zero displacement while personnel are working at heights.
Many industrial casters only lock the wheel rotation, leaving room for slight swaying—
which is extremely dangerous in scaffolding applications.