How to judge whether the reducer needs vertical assembly
Publish Time: 2026-04-14 Origin: Site
Whether the reducer needs to be installed vertically depends mainly on the spatial layout of the equipment, load direction, stress conditions and application scenarios. If the equipment design requires power transmission in the vertical direction, the lateral space is limited, or the load is vertical (such as elevators, vertical mixers), vertical assembly is required.
4 key factors to determine whether vertical installation is required
1. Installation space limitation
If the lateral (horizontal) space of the equipment is small but the vertical height is sufficient, vertical installation can save floor space.
Typical scenarios: Vertical transmission modules and small cabinet equipment in automated production lines.
2. Power transmission direction
When the motor and load are arranged vertically (for example, the motor is on top and the reducer outputs power downward), vertical installation must be selected.
Examples: lifting platforms, vertical mixers, centrifuges, etc.
3. Equipment structure and layout requirements
Some equipment designs inherently require the reducer to be fixed vertically, such as directly connected to the top or bottom of the box through flanges.
Identifiable features: The output shaft is perpendicular to the ground, and the motor and reducer are arranged "up and down".
4. Loading type and working conditions
When installed vertically, the reducer needs to bear a large axial force (gravity + load), so it is necessary to confirm whether its structure supports axial load.
If the equipment has a large axial load (such as deep well mixing, lifting heavy objects), you need to choose a model specially designed for vertical use (such as with a "V" mark).