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NCCCO Tower Crane Certification Tests 2025/2026 - Complete Bundle with Solutions & Graded A Answers

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: Prepare for your NCCCO Tower Crane certification with this complete 2025/2026 exam bundle. Features all new updates with 100% correct questions, verified answers, and complete solutions to guarantee a Grade A on your mobile crane, overhead crane, and signalperson certification exams.

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Institution
NCCCO Tower Crane Certification
Course
NCCCO Tower Crane Certification

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Uploaded on
December 6, 2025
Number of pages
20
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
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NCCCO Tower Crane Certification Tests 2025/2026
- Complete Bundle with Solutions & Graded A
Answers

A 200-ft hammer-head tower crane is being climbed to a new 180 ft height. The climber
frame is fully engaged and the climbing ladder is 12 ft long. Before releasing the
tower-top pins to begin the climb, you must verify that:
1.​ A) The pin shear rating equals the maximum climber load shown on the load
chart​
B) The pins are removed completely so the tower can slide freely​
C) The load-moment indicator is recalibrated for the new height while climbing​
D) The climbing ladder rungs are lubricated to reduce friction

Answer: A

Rationale: OSHA 1926.1435(b)(3) requires that all pin connections used during climbing
have a shear capacity at least equal to the maximum forces developed during the
climbing operation. Calibrating the LMI mid-climb (C) is unsafe; pins must remain
captive (B wrong); lubrication (D) is not a code requirement and can create slip hazards.

While operating a saddle-jib tower crane, you notice the load-moment indicator (LMI)
alarm sounds at 85 % of chart but the load is still 3 t below the charted capacity for that
radius. Wind is 12 mph. Your first action is to:
2.​ A) Continue the lift slowly because the chart still allows the load​
B) Swing the load in toward the tower to reduce radius and silence the alarm​
C) Stop all hoist and travel functions and determine why the LMI is pre-alarming​
D) Reset the LMI system and resume hoisting

Answer: C

Rationale: ASME B30.3-2024 para. 3-2.2.1 requires the operator to cease operations
when an overload warning occurs and investigate the cause. The LMI may be correctly
sensing hook/load weight plus dynamic effects not shown on the static chart.

,Continuing (A) or swinging in (B) overrides safety; resetting (D) violates OSHA
1926.1416(d).

A tower crane is to be erected on a new parking-deck slab with a design compressive
strength of 4 000 psi. The crane manufacturer’s manual requires 3 000 psi minimum for
the specific base-plate loading. The slab is 14 days old and field-cured cylinders
averaged 3 200 psi this morning. The appointed person’s plan says “proceed.” You
should:
3.​ A) Refuse to erect until 28-day strength is verified​
B) Accept the plan because the current strength exceeds the manual minimum​
C) Demand additional blocking under the base to spread the load​
D) Request a written professional-engineer confirmation of the in-place strength
for the specific loads

Answer: D

Rationale: OSHA 1926.1402(a)(2) requires the foundation/supporting surface be firm,
graded, drained, and sized to support the crane per a qualified person. A PE letter
documenting that 3 200 psi is adequate for the specific base reactions satisfies the
standard. Simply exceeding 3 000 psi (B) ignores safety factors; waiting 28 days (A) is
unnecessary if PE confirms.

During a pre-climb inspection you find one anti-two-block (A2B) limit switch on the main
hoist has been bypassed with a jumper wire. The crane is otherwise ready to climb 40 ft.
You must:
4.​ A) Remove the jumper, test the switch, and document the repair before climbing​
B) Tag the switch “out of order” and climb only with reduced load​
C) Leave the jumper in place until the climb is finished, then repair​
D) Use the auxiliary hoist for the climb and fix the main hoist later

Answer: A

Rationale: OSHA 1926.1415(d)(3)(ii) mandates that A2B devices be operative; a bypass
(jumper) is a citable violation. The device must be restored and tested before

, operations—including climbing—commence. Climbing with reduced load (B) or using
another hoist (D) does not correct the violation.

A 2-leg chain sling (grade 100, ⅜ in. dia.) is reeved around a 14-in. square concrete
column and hooked back to the master link at a 60° included angle. The hitch is:
5.​ A) A choker hitch with 100 % of sling capacity​
B) A basket hitch whose capacity is derated by the angle to 86 %​
C) A choker hitch whose capacity is reduced 25 % due to pinching​
D) A basket hitch with full 100 % capacity because angle < 90°

Answer: C

Rationale: ASME B30.9-2021 Table 9-2.1 shows a choker hitch loses 25 % capacity due
to pinching regardless of angle. The configuration described is choker, not basket,
because the legs are hooked back into the master link, not terminated at separate
points.

A tower crane operator is signaled to “boom up” during a 40 mph gust. The load chart
states “reduce to 70 % capacity when wind > 32 mph.” The current load is at 65 % of
chart. You should:
6.​ A) Boom up slowly while keeping the load in view​
B) Stop the hoist, lower the load to the ground, and cease operations​
C) Swing the load to the lee side of the tower and continue​
D) Boom down to reduce sail area and finish the lift

Answer: B

Rationale: OSHA 1926.1435(a)(5) prohibits hoisting when wind exceeds manufacturer
limits; the chart’s 32 mph cut-off is mandatory. The operator must land the load and
cease operations. Attempting to boom up/down (A, D) or swinging (C) prolongs
exposure.

A hammer-head tower crane’s jib is fitted with a 2-line runner (whip line) on the main
trolley. The operator feels “slack” in the runner when the hook is at low radius. The most
probable cause is:
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