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Find the Right Tool for Every Job

Author: James Collingwood
by James Collingwood
Posted: May 21, 2015

The material handling equipment which is freely available today is of such a range and quality that it’s hard to imagine a time when people had to get by without it. Pre mechanisation, however, and the advances in the production of material handling equipment which came with this mechanisation, people had to rely much more on sheer brute force when it came to shifting items which needed to be relocated. Not only did this place limitations on the size and nature of those items, but it also took a heavy toll on the people doing the shifting. The material handling equipment available today substitutes engineering ingenuity for physical strength, and is wide and varied enough to provide the solution in a huge number of scenarios.

Moving Furniture

The more well-constructed and robust an item of furniture is, the more it is likely to weigh, and that means that material handling equipment will be called upon to move it for a number of reasons. Firstly there is the fact that it might not be physically possible to lift and move heavy furnishings by hand, and secondly there is the condition of the item itself to take into account. A piece of equipment such as a hydraulic or manual furniture mover set on wheels will allow even bulky items to be shifted smoothly and in a manner which avoids collisions with door frames, walls and any other items of furniture.

Stacking

Any organisation which is large enough to store goods in bulk – from the obvious such as a shop or warehouse, to schools, hospitals and galleries – will need to stack those goods in order to maximise storage space. Lifting heavy items above head height risks back injury or damage to falling goods, however, and while a large warehouse may have its’ own fleet of fork lift trucks, smaller organisations will lack the space or budget to be similarly equipped. That’s where manual or hydraulic stackers come into their own. Small enough to be operated by a single person, yet robust enough to lift and move heavy weights, stackers of this kind take the labour out of organising stock and storing it safely, granting the members of the organisation concerned the freedom to simply get on with their day to day jobs. The largest such stackers are capable of lifting weights up to 2000kg as high as 2.5 metres.

Table

There are time when you may need to work on a piece of machinery, carrying out repairs or running a routine service check, and need to do so with the item in question elevated to a convenient working height. Squatting down on the floor in order to work is uncomfortable and likely to lead to back pain, whilst also making it highly unlikely that the person in question is going to work to their full potential. Lift the item up, on the other hand, and you can either stand as you work or even sit down, thus remaining comfortable and max imising the amount of time you can safely devote to the task in hand. When the item being worked on is extremely heavy, as will often be the case with pieces of machinery, then lifting it manually onto a table top will be impractical, making a hydraulic lift table the idea solution to the problem. Using such a table, the item to be worked on could be shifted onto the table top at ground level and then the table top itself, via a hydraulic system, lifted to a height which means that working on it will be practical and comfortable.

Wheels

On many occasions the solution to a problem can be strikingly simple. Needing to move a heavy item – a washing machine, for example, or a safe, filing cabinet or cupboard – might prove extremely difficult. Lifting it will be out of the question in many cases, particularly if you’re working on your own, and simply sliding or dragging it across the floor could cause damage to both the item itself and the floor covering. The simple answer? Wheels. Since it’s not practical to fit castors onto every large item which needs shifting, using wheeled corner movers provides a simple answer capable of turning even the most cumbersome item into one which glides around the room with ease.

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About the Author

Author is an expert article writer who has written many articles on the topic Currently, he is writing articles on mechanical handling equipment

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Author: James Collingwood

James Collingwood

Member since: May 21, 2015
Published articles: 1

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