Actuator for Mobile Machinery Guide: How to Spec Motion
You need an actuator for mobile machinery when a battery-powered vehicle has to move a hatch, chute, gate, latch, seat, panel, or tool without hydraulics. Size it by force, stroke, speed, duty cycle, shock load, voltage drop, and IP rating. Miss any 1 of those and the actuator usually fails in the field, not on the bench.
What is an actuator for mobile machinery?
An actuator for mobile machinery creates controlled linear motion on equipment that moves, vibrates, sits outside, and runs from a battery or vehicle electrical system.
You see it on agricultural machines, compact construction equipment, service vehicles, utility carts, RV mechanisms, and off-highway platforms where hydraulics add too much cost, leakage risk, or maintenance.
Simple Explanation
A mobile actuator works like a powered strut. A DC motor turns a gearbox and screw, and the screw pushes or pulls a rod in a straight line.
The hard part does not come from the actuator. The hard part comes from the machine around it: mud, vibration, shock, low battery voltage, poor bracket geometry, and operators who cycle the mechanism harder than the bench test ever showed.
Use the formula below to calculate the minimum actuator force for a mobile mechanism after geometry, shock, and safety factor.
Fspec = Fworking × Kgeometry × Kshock × SF
| Symbol | Meaning | SI Unit | Imperial Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fspec | Minimum actuator force rating you should select | N | lb |
| Fworking | Force that actually moves the load before derating | N | lb |
| Kgeometry | Multiplier for poor lever angle or off-axis motion | Unitless | Unitless |
| Kshock | Multiplier for vibration, bumps, and impact loading | Unitless | Unitless |
| SF | Safety factor, usually 1.3 to 1.5 for mobile machinery | Unitless | Unitless |
Quick navigation: Direct Answer | How It Is Used | Suitable Applications | Formula | Worked Examples | Products | FAQ

How do you use an actuator for mobile machinery?
You use this calculation when a vehicle or off-highway machine needs controlled motion and you do not want to add a hydraulic circuit. That moment usually comes during a hatch lift, chute adjustment, deck height change, air dam movement, seat slide, gate lock, or access panel design.
Mobile machinery changes the actuator problem. A shop fixture sits still. A field machine bounces, twists, heats up in the sun, gets washed, and runs from a battery that may sag below 12 V during cranking or heavy electrical load.
The actuator also has to survive the operator. Operators hold switches too long, cycle a mechanism with dirt packed in the guides, and drive away before a panel fully retracts. Spec the actuator for the real machine, not the clean CAD model.
Suitable Applications
Mobile machinery actuators fit best when you need intermittent linear motion, moderate speed, simple wiring, and clean force control without hydraulic oil. These applications often lead directly to actuator selection.
| Application | Actuator Job | Main Sizing Driver | Common Mistake |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skid steer or compact loader access panel | Lift and hold a service hatch | Start angle and hatch weight | Mounting the actuator nearly parallel to the hatch at the closed position |
| Agricultural spreader chute | Open, close, or trim material flow | Dirt friction and jam load | Sizing only for a clean chute |
| Sprayer boom latch | Lock or release a folding boom | Shock load during transport | Using the static latch force as the full design load |
| Utility vehicle bed cover | Raise a cover or lid | Wind load, hinge friction, and stroke | Ignoring crosswind and rain weight |
| Municipal salt spreader gate | Adjust gate opening | Corrosion, grit, and IP rating | Leaving connectors in spray paths |
| Mobile robotics platform | Deploy a sensor mast or tool | Position repeatability and battery draw | Skipping feedback when the controller needs position data |
| RV slide-out or hatch mechanism | Move a panel or compartment cover | Stroke, synchronization, and duty cycle | Running 2 sides without considering position matching |
How does a mobile actuator system work?
A typical electric actuator system uses a 12 V or 24 V DC supply, a switch or controller, wiring sized for current, brackets at each end, and a linear actuator with a clevis or fixed mounting point. Reverse the polarity and the actuator reverses direction on a standard 2-wire DC actuator.
The motor turns a gearbox. The gearbox turns a lead screw. The screw converts rotary motion into push or pull force at the rod. If the actuator includes Hall effect feedback, the sensor reads alternating magnetic poles on a rotating disk inside the gearbox. The controller counts those pulses; it does not directly measure rod travel, force, side load, or binding.
That detail matters on mobile equipment. Feedback helps a controller track position, but it will not save a mechanism with bent brackets, mud-packed slides, or a hatch that side-loads the rod. Mechanical alignment still does the heavy lifting.
What changes when battery power feeds the actuator?
Battery power changes force, speed, wire size, and fuse selection. A low battery can slow the actuator, increase run time, and raise heating because the motor spends more time under load.
For rough battery sizing, calculate mechanical output power first. Then divide by voltage and efficiency to estimate current. Use real actuator current data for final wiring and fuse sizing when you have it.
Pmech ≈ Fload × v × 0.113
Ibatt ≈ Pmech ÷ (η × V)
| Symbol | Meaning | SI Unit | Imperial Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pmech | Mechanical output power | W | W |
| Fload | Linear force under load | N | lb |
| v | Actuator speed under load | m/s | in/s |
| 0.113 | Conversion from lb × in/s to W | Not needed with SI inputs | W per lb-in/s |
| Ibatt | Estimated battery current | A | A |
| η | Estimated actuator electrical-to-mechanical efficiency | Unitless | Unitless |
| V | Battery voltage under load | V | V |
Example: a 330 lb load moving at 0.25 in/s needs about 330 × 0.25 × 0.113 = 9.32 W of mechanical output. With η = 0.30 and V = 12 V, the current estimate gives 9.32 ÷ (0.30 × 12) = 2.6 A. Startup current and stall current run higher, so do not size wiring from this rough number alone.
For deeper power checks, use our Actuator Power Consumption Calculator — Watts from Force and Speed, Battery Runtime Calculator — Ah to Hours, and How Long Can an Actuator Last on a 12V Car Battery?.
What IP rating do you need on outdoor mobile machinery?
IP ratings tell you how well an enclosure resists solid particles and water. The 1st digit covers dust. The 2nd digit covers water. Mobile machinery needs this because water rarely arrives politely. It comes from rain, pressure washing, tire spray, mud, fertilizer, salt, and operators with hoses.
An actuator IP rating only covers the actuator body as the product specifies it. You still need to protect wiring, connectors, switches, control boxes, splices, and battery terminals. A good actuator with a poor connector location still fails.
| IP Rating | Practical Meaning | Mobile Machinery Use | What to Watch |
|---|---|---|---|
| IP54 | Limited dust protection and splash resistance | Covered compartments, cab mechanisms, dry access panels | Do not place it in tire spray or washdown paths |
| IP65 | Dust tight with low-pressure water jet resistance | Outdoor equipment with light spray exposure | Connector sealing still controls field reliability |
| IP66 | Dust tight with stronger water jet resistance | Most exposed mobile machinery locations | Water pooling around seals still causes trouble |
| IP67 | Dust tight with temporary immersion resistance | Low locations that may see puddles or short submersion | Cycle after immersion only if the full system can handle it |
| IP68 | Dust tight with deeper or longer immersion under stated conditions | Special submerged or flood-prone designs | The manufacturer must state the immersion condition |
For more detail, read our IP Rating Guide of Firgelli Automation’s Linear Actuators and the IP67 Linear Actuator Guide: How to Choose for Water Use.
How much duty cycle can the machine demand?
Duty cycle tells you how much time the actuator spends running compared with resting. Mobile machinery often looks intermittent during design, then operators cycle it repeatedly during setup, loading, or clearing jams.
Duty Cycle = Run Time ÷ (Run Time + Rest Time) × 100%
| Symbol | Meaning | SI Unit | Imperial Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Run Time | Total time the actuator motor runs during the cycle | s | s |
| Rest Time | Total cooling time before the next cycle | s | s |
| Duty Cycle | Run percentage during the full cycle | % | % |
If a gate opens for 8 s, closes for 8 s, then rests for 44 s, duty cycle equals 16 ÷ (16 + 44) × 100% = 26.7%. If your actuator data allows less than that, heat builds. Heat kills motors, grease, seals, and gearboxes.
Use the duty cycle guide What is DUTY CYCLE in a linear actuator? or the deeper sizing article Linear Actuator Sizing Calculations: Force, Stroke, Speed, Duty Cycle, and Safety Factor when the machine will cycle often.
What does shock loading do to actuator selection?
Shock load turns a safe static design into a broken field design. A 100 lb panel can hit the actuator like a much larger load when a vehicle drops into a rut, a gate slams shut, or a latch catches during transport.
Use Kshock = 1.2 for smooth cab or interior mechanisms, 1.5 for normal field vibration, and 2.0 or higher for impact-prone gates, latches, and transport locks. Then test the machine with the real brackets, real wiring, and real operator pattern.
Shock absorbers, dampers, rubber stops, and over-center latches can reduce actuator abuse. The article Hydraulic Shock Absorber Mechanism: How It Works, Parts, Diagram, and Industrial Uses Explained helps when impact energy, not steady force, drives the failure.
What formula should you use for slides, gates, and hatches?
Use different formulas for sliding loads and hinged loads. A sliding gate cares about friction and slope. A hinged hatch cares about torque around the hinge and the actuator angle at the worst point of travel.
For a sliding gate or chute on an incline, use:
Fworking = W × (μ × cos θ + sin θ)
| Symbol | Meaning | SI Unit | Imperial Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fworking | Force before safety and shock factors | N | lb |
| W | Weight of the moving part | N | lb |
| μ | Coefficient of friction for guides or slides | Unitless | Unitless |
| θ | Incline angle from horizontal | degrees | degrees |
For a hinged hatch, calculate the worst starting force:
Factuator = (W × dload × Kshock × SF) ÷ (dmount × sin α)
| Symbol | Meaning | SI Unit | Imperial Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Factuator | Required actuator force at the worst hatch angle | N | lb |
| W | Hatch weight | N | lb |
| dload | Distance from hinge to hatch center of gravity | mm | inches |
| dmount | Distance from hinge to actuator attachment point on hatch | mm | inches |
| α | Angle between actuator line of force and hatch lever arm at the worst point | degrees | degrees |
| Kshock | Shock multiplier | Unitless | Unitless |
| SF | Safety factor | Unitless | Unitless |
The sin α term punishes shallow actuator angles. If you mount the actuator almost in line with the hatch, sin α gets small and force climbs fast. Better geometry often costs less than a larger actuator.
How do the numbers work in a simple example?
Given a 90 lb flat sliding guard, μ = 0.20, Kshock = 1.5, and SF = 1.3.
Fworking = 90 × 0.20 = 18 lb.
Fspec = 18 × 1.5 × 1.3 = 35.1 lb.
That says the mechanism needs at least 35.1 lb before you check stroke, speed, IP rating, duty cycle, and voltage drop.
How do you calculate a real hatch actuator?
Let’s calculate the actuator for mobile machinery on a 120 lb steel service hatch. The hinge sits at the rear edge. The hatch center of gravity sits 18 inches from the hinge. The actuator attaches 10 inches from the hinge. At the closed position, the actuator line makes a 35° angle to the hatch lever arm. The machine travels off-road, so use Kshock = 1.5 and SF = 1.3.
Substitute the numbers:
Factuator = (120 × 18 × 1.5 × 1.3) ÷ (10 × sin 35°)
sin 35° ≈ 0.574, so:
Factuator = 4212 ÷ 5.74 = 734 lb
A 734 lb force requirement exceeds many compact actuator choices. You have 3 practical fixes: move the actuator attachment farther from the hinge, improve the starting angle, or use a heavier actuator class. If the hatch can accept a 16 inch mount distance instead of 10 inches, the denominator becomes 16 × 0.574 = 9.18 and the force drops to 4212 ÷ 9.18 = 459 lb.
That single bracket change moves the design from a heavy industrial requirement toward a high-force mobile actuator range. Geometry first. Product second.
What trade-offs matter against hydraulics and manual linkages?
| System | Hardware Required | Strengths | Weaknesses | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electric linear actuator | Actuator, brackets, switch or controller, wiring, fuse | Simple installation, clean operation, position feedback options, good for battery vehicles | Intermittent duty limits, slower than many hydraulic systems, sensitive to side load | Hatches, gates, latches, chutes, light implements, RV and utility equipment |
| Hydraulic cylinder | Pump, tank, valves, hoses, fittings, cylinder | High force density, good for hard continuous work, fast response with enough flow | Leaks, hose damage, maintenance, noise, higher system cost if no hydraulics already exist | Loaders, dump beds, implements that already use hydraulic power |
| Manual linkage | Handle, lever, pivots, latches, gas spring if needed | Cheap, no wiring, easy field repair | Operator effort, poor remote control, limited automation | Low-cycle panels, service covers, simple locks |
| Pneumatic cylinder | Compressor, valves, air lines, regulator, cylinder | Fast motion, clean cylinder body, good for existing air systems | Compressible motion, air supply demand, poor fit for many outdoor battery machines | Service trucks or equipment with onboard air |
Related FIRGELLI Products
Use the calculated force, stroke, speed, IP rating, feedback need, and synchronization need to narrow the actuator. The product facts below come from the current FIRGELLI product data supplied for this topic.
| Product | Force | Speed | Stroke | IP Rating | Feedback | Sync Compatible | Best Fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C-Series Actuator | 45 to 225 lb | 0.3 to 2.0 in/s | 1 to 30 inches | IP44 | No | No | Light covered mechanisms where speed or long stroke matters more than washdown resistance |
| Utility Linear Actuator | 110 to 330 lb | 0.25 to 1.0 in/s | 2 to 12 inches | IP66 | Yes, Hall Effect | Yes | Outdoor gates, lids, latches, and mobile mechanisms that need position feedback |
| Super Duty Actuators | 220 to 450 lb | 0.3 to 0.75 in/s | 2 to 40 inches | IP66 | Yes, Hall Effect | Yes | Longer stroke and higher force mobile equipment jobs |
| Classic Rod Actuators | 35 to 200 lb | 0.3 to 2.0 in/s | 1 to 24 inches | IP54 | No | No | Covered general-purpose motion with moderate force |
| Industrial Actuator | 2200 lb | 0.2 in/s | 10 to 40 inches | IP66 | Yes | No | Slow, high-force mobile or industrial machinery motion |
Brackets matter as much as actuator force. The MB1-P Mounting Bracket for P-series Actuator fits the base end of the Utility Linear Actuator, while MB17 Mounting Bracket For Super Duty Actuators supports clevis or end mounting on Super Duty Actuators.
If you still sit at the early sizing stage, compare the full linear actuators category, run options through the linear actuator selector, or check geometry with the linear actuator calculator.
What related guides help with mobile machinery sizing?
Mobile designs often fail from power, environment, and duty assumptions rather than peak force alone. These FIRGELLI guides help you check the rest of the system: Linear Motion Energy Consumption Calculator, Battery C-Rating & Max Continuous Amp Draw Interactive Calculator, PWM Duty Cycle Calculator — Average Voltage, and What is a Linear Actuator Duty Cycle and Why Does It Matter?.
For adjacent machine designs, see Actuator for Grain Handling Guide: How to Size Gates and Chutes, Actuator for Irrigation Systems Guide: How to Size Valves, and Actuator for Filtration Machinery Guide: How to Size Motion.
FAQ
What voltage should I use for a mobile machinery actuator?
Most compact mobile equipment uses 12 V DC or 24 V DC because the vehicle already supplies it. Check voltage at the actuator while it runs, not just at the battery. Long cable runs, undersized wire, weak batteries, and shared loads can drop voltage enough to slow the actuator and raise heating.
How much safety factor should I use on mobile equipment?
Use at least 1.3 for controlled mechanisms and 1.5 for normal outdoor mobile machinery. Use 2.0 or higher when the actuator sees impact, transport shock, jammed material, or operators who cycle the mechanism while the machine moves. The safety factor does not replace good bracket geometry.
Should I choose Hall effect feedback for mobile machinery?
Choose Hall effect feedback when your controller needs position tracking, synchronization, or repeatable travel. Hall sensors read alternating magnetic poles on a rotating disk in the gearbox. The controller sees pulses, not direct rod travel, so calibration, wiring, voltage, pulse count, and direction handling still matter.
Can an electric actuator replace hydraulics on mobile machinery?
Yes, when the motion needs intermittent duty, moderate speed, clean installation, and manageable force. Electric actuators suit hatches, gates, latches, chutes, and small positioning jobs. Hydraulics still make sense when the machine already has hydraulic power or the function needs high force for long periods.
What IP rating should I choose for outdoor equipment?
IP66 makes sense for many exposed mobile machinery locations because it handles dust and strong water jets. IP54 fits covered compartments better than washdown areas. IP67 or IP68 only helps when the entire system, including connectors and wiring, can tolerate immersion or pooled water.
Why do actuators fail on mobile machinery?
Most failures come from side load, poor brackets, shallow starting angles, dirt-packed guides, water in connectors, low voltage, excessive duty cycle, or shock loads that the static force calculation ignored. Start with geometry, add shock and safety factors, then verify wiring and environmental protection.
About the Author
Robbie Dickson is the Chief Engineer and Founder of FIRGELLI Automations. With a background in aeronautical and mechanical engineering at Rolls-Royce, BMW, and Ford, he has spent over 2 decades building precision motion control systems, from linear actuators for robotics to active aerodynamic braking systems for supercars.
What should you check before ordering?
Check 7 items before you buy: actual load, worst-case geometry, stroke, speed, duty cycle, battery voltage under load, and IP rating for the full system. Then add shock factor. If the calculated force looks too high, fix the brackets before you oversize the actuator.
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