Industry News

SANY Excavator Spare Parts Buyer Guide: Hydraulic Pump, Final Drive, Undercarriage and Export Checks

SANY excavator spare parts warehouse sourcing evidence

Buyers sourcing SANY excavator spare parts should send model, serial number, old-part photos, part numbers if available, measurements, condition preference, warranty expectations and shipment destination before confirming hydraulic pump, final drive, undercarriage or engine-related parts.

SANY excavator spare parts warehouse sourcing evidence
SANY excavator spare parts sourcing should combine machine identity, old-part evidence and condition clarity.

SANY excavator spare parts are an important PRIMA strength area because many buyers need a mix of hydraulic, drivetrain and undercarriage support after equipment has been working for years. This page connects to PRIMA guides on excavator hydraulic pumps, final drive sourcing and excavator parts supplier selection.

Buyer Summary

  • SANY spare parts buyers should identify the machine and the old part before asking for final price.
  • Hydraulic pumps and final drives need port, mounting, shaft and test-evidence checks.
  • Undercarriage parts need measurements such as link count, pitch, roller type and sprocket teeth.
  • OEM, aftermarket, used and rebuilt options should be compared by downtime cost, warranty and evidence.

What information should a SANY parts buyer send first?

Start with model, serial number, old-part photos, visible part number, measurement photos, quantity and destination.

A strong quotation file reduces back-and-forth. SANY excavators can vary by series, repair history and local configuration. If the old part is available, photos from multiple angles are often more useful than a short model description.

Information Best evidence Reason
Machine identity Model and serial plate Confirms series and configuration
Old part Photos of all sides and connection points Shows the real installed part
Destination Country, port and urgency Shapes freight and packing plan
SANY excavator old part photos and measurement evidence
Old-part photos and measurement tools help confirm the real installed component before quotation.

How should hydraulic pump fitment be verified?

Hydraulic pumps should be checked by port layout, rotation, regulator position, mounting face and old-pump photos.

Pump mismatch can cause installation failure, pressure problems or long downtime. Before shipment, buyers should request photos of the actual pump or stock unit, plus any test or inspection evidence available for used and rebuilt options.

Pump item Check Risk if ignored
Ports Number, size and position Hoses may not connect
Rotation Pump rotation and drive connection Machine cannot operate correctly
Condition New, used or rebuilt evidence Warranty and performance uncertainty
SANY excavator parts OEM aftermarket used rebuilt comparison
Condition grade changes price, warranty, lead time and downtime risk.

What matters when buying a SANY final drive?

Final drives should be checked by mounting face, bolt pattern, shaft connection, port position and gear condition.

A final drive may look close in photos but fail at the mounting or shaft connection. For rebuilt or used units, buyers should ask for condition photos, oil leakage checks and warranty scope. A lower price is not useful if the travel motor cannot be installed.

Final drive check Evidence Buyer benefit
Mounting face Front and rear photos Confirms installation fit
Shaft connection Spline or connection photos Reduces drivetrain mismatch
Ports Port layout and cap photos Protects hydraulic connection
SANY excavator hydraulic pump and final drive inspection
Hydraulic pump and final drive checks should include ports, mounting faces and shaft connections.

How should OEM, aftermarket, used and rebuilt parts be compared?

The best condition grade depends on machine value, downtime cost, budget, availability and warranty expectation.

OEM can be safest for high-value machines. Aftermarket can reduce cost when quality is stable. Used or rebuilt parts may solve urgency, but the buyer should request photos, inspection notes and warranty boundaries. PRIMA should make this tradeoff clear instead of treating every part as the same.

SANY excavator spare parts export packing preparation
Export preparation should protect hydraulic ports, heavy parts and finished surfaces before shipment.

What export packing details reduce damage risk?

Ports should be capped, heavy parts should be fixed, and the actual packed batch should be photographed before shipment.

Hydraulic components are vulnerable to contamination. Undercarriage and drivetrain parts are heavy enough to damage other cargo if they move. Packing photos help buyers confirm protection, quantity and readiness before the balance payment.

Evidence Table

Decision Evidence to collect Commercial value
Correct fitment Old-part photos, serial number and measurement photos Avoids wrong-part downtime
Condition grade OEM, aftermarket, used or rebuilt proof Matches budget with risk
Export readiness Packing and shipment-ready photos Reduces damage and disputes

Buyer FAQ

Can SANY spare parts be quoted from the model name alone?

It is not recommended. Model name helps, but serial number, old-part photos and measurements reduce fitment risk.

Are rebuilt hydraulic parts acceptable?

They can be useful when evidence, testing and warranty boundaries are clear. Buyers should compare downtime risk before choosing.

What parts should be packed with extra care?

Hydraulic pumps, final drives, motors and precision parts need capped ports, padding and real packing photos.

Conclusion

A good SANY excavator spare parts order is evidence-led. Confirm the machine, the old part, the condition grade, the warranty boundary and the packing method before choosing the cheapest offer.

References