Excavator Cab Industrial Joystick Selection Guide

Hydraulic excavator OEMs and fleet retrofit teams face the same early decision: which excavator cab industrial joystick architecture matches the machine’s ECU generation, operator reach, and duty cycle. Trunsin supplies analog and CANbus sticks across the ZS and AT series — configured through the online configurator with PDF output for harness design.

This guide covers selection criteria for hydraulic excavator controls. For CANbus fleet outcomes, see seven ways our CANbus joystick improves construction sites — here we focus on specification logic, not case-study repetition.

Yellow excavator loading dirt at construction site — excavator cab industrial joystick application environment
Yellow excavator loading dirt at construction site — excavator cab industrial joystick application environment

Analog vs CANbus in excavator cabs

Signal path Best fit Trunsin examples
Analog (0–5 V / 4–20 mA) Legacy hydraulic controllers, simple retrofit ZS30, AT10
CANbus / CANopen Modern ECU with diagnostics and multi-function mapping ZS40, AT11

CANbus sticks reduce harness complexity and expose fault codes to the ECU — valuable when fleet uptime is measured in diagnostic minutes, not wiring hours. Analog remains appropriate when the existing controller expects resistor or voltage inputs and a full ECU upgrade is out of scope.

Axis count and gate type

Excavator hydraulic excavator controls map stick deflection to boom, arm, bucket, and swing functions. Typical configurations:

  • 2-axis cross gate — primary boom/swing or dual-function on compact machines
  • Multi-axis with friction lock — hold position on grade or slope work
  • Spring return — default for functions that must center when released

Gate selection is a hydraulic-function decision, not a catalog default. Trunsin’s configurator exposes gate codes per model so specifiers align stick geometry with valve spool mapping before metal is cut for a custom panel.

Cab ergonomics and reach

Excavator cabs constrain stick height, armrest angle, and knee clearance. Before selecting a model:

  • Measure panel cutout and mounting bolt pattern on the existing armrest
  • Confirm grip height relative to seat adjustment range across operator percentiles
  • Specify handle force acceptable for 10-hour duty — catalog values such as ZS30 at ~8 N vs AT16 under 50 N mechanical effort serve different operator expectations

Trunsin validates reach with customer armrest drawings in the configuration release gate — not after shipment.

How we validate excavator cab selections

  1. Configurator PDF — grip code, gate, movement type, connector family locked by the specifier
  2. Drawing cross-check — mount footprint vs armrest plate; cable exit direction vs harness route
  3. First article — axis centering, handle force spot check, safety switch continuity
  4. CANopen commissioning (when applicable) — PDO map signed by OEM controls engineer
  5. Field feedback loop — batch revisions tracked against gap records when fleet trials surface drift

Excavator selection checklist

Item Question to answer Tool
ECU generation Analog or CANopen? Machine wiring diagram
Functions How many axes + aux rockers? Hydraulic schematic
Gate Cross, all-direction, or single? Configurator gate step
Safety Deadman required? Machine interlock spec
Environment IP rating for open cab vs enclosed? Application photos
Replacement Footprint match to failed stick? Photo + connector pin count

Frequently asked questions

Is ZS40 always the right CANbus choice for excavators?

ZS40 is a strong default for modern hydraulic excavators with CANopen ECUs. Compact cabs or auxiliary panels may fit ZS30 analog or AT16 multi-axis mechanical sticks instead — model choice follows footprint and signal path, not fleet branding alone.

How do we document the selection for procurement?

Complete trunsin.com/configure, export the PDF spec sheet, and attach it to the RFQ. Our configurator workflow guide explains the handoff to engineering.

Can one stick control both travel and implement on a compact excavator?

Sometimes via multi-axis gating and rocker auxiliaries — but hydraulic interlock design stays with the OEM. Trunsin supplies the stick configuration; the ECU maps functions.

Related resources

Start your excavator cab specification

  1. Confirm analog vs CANbus with your controls team
  2. Configure the target model online
  3. Contact sales@trunsin.com with the PDF and armrest drawing

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