checking back with us here at WAOC this week, I’m Marty T Hawkins, I hope
everyone’s having a great one! I’m not
sure what all we’re going to end up talking about today, I want to talk about
the Slip-sheet and Clamp trucks for sure and I’ve got a few more bullet points
in front of me but I wanted to share a quick story I got this week. So here’s the scenario, An Order Selector sharing
“so I decided to give all that planning and goal stuff a shot. In December I decided to write out what I
wanted to do in 2019. In January I
started speaking up at my start up meeting, I used a few of those topics I
heard on your Podcast. I quit talking in
the aisles and focus on every batch now.
I’m pulling 60 more cases an hour and I have not had a mis-ship this
month, and only 1 short, which I’m sure the driver just didn’t deliver. I’m making a little over $2/hr more so far
this month in incentives, I’ll be listening all year. I love hearing a good
success story, I’ve reached out to a few listeners that’s working their plans
and I hope to maybe even have 1 or 2 of them join us for an episode. If you have or know of a successful goal and
plan coming together shoot us an email to
[email protected]so I can share it with the others!
sheet and clamp attachments. We’ve
spoken about the slip-sheet before, our friend Lavoil, quite the professional
operator shared his expertise with us back in episode 56 so let’s talk about
the clamp truck this week! I’ll include
two resource articles in todays show notes in case you’d like to check them
out. One from https://www.toyotaforklift.com/blog/under-pressure-choosing-the-right-clamp-force-control-type
and one from https://raymondhandling.com/learn/library/what-is-a-carton-clamp-and-why-do-i-need-one/ I learned to operate the clamp on an old
Hyster, unloading washers and dryers from rail cars. I loved that job, now back then we didn’t have
automatic adjustments and pretty much had to work with our maintenance men to
adjust pressures, it wasn’t difficult but we could only adjust the squeeze or I
think our maintenance guy called it capture pressure by only a few pounds on my
particular lift. But that worked out
fine because my lift pretty much only moved washers and dryers all day!
more companies are using the slip sheet or clamps now for their productivity. In many instances you can remove the manual
unloading step within a floor load by driving into the trailer, clamping the
load, bringing it out and placing it on the pallet. And that was the tricky part for me with the
washer and driers, I’d place them on a custom pallet, it’d hold two side by
side, and then I’d pick up the pallet with the clamp and move it over to the
staging area for a forklift to haul it over to the aisles. Anyway, so on a clamp truck your hydraulic controls
operate the squeeze of your clamps. I’ve
seen some attachment units use the side-shift system be used for your clamp
pressure. In many instances your going
to be using a sit-down or stand up lift with an attachment. Something your maintenance department has
installed on a older lift maybe. Now
there’s some really nice and fancy units out there, and there great in a high
volume facility that’s primary using clamps but I’ve only experience their use
as an additional tool or unit, maybe being used like 20% of the day.
industry has some high tech machines.
You can lift those huge round rolls, rotate them 180 degrees and store
them on top of each other with them. All
digital and programed for the item and weight your carrying or lifting.
around Carton Clamps mostly, and there really the most versatile of all the
clamps. A few of others commonly used are the Fork Clamp and its really best
for those awkward loads. It lets the
operator position the forks to clamp on to the product, really helping with
wear and tear on the pallets. Then you
have the Bale Clamp, you can pick up any type of bale with those units. What else, oh the Drum Clamp, you’ll see the
Drum Clamp in petroleum and chemical industries, you know, like moving 55-gallon
several different Clamp force controls or systems you might be using. I have not personally driven any of the new
units utilizing them yet, however after learning about em today I can’t wait to
run into one out in the field next week!
Today we have the Three Position Pressure Regulators. As the name implies the driver has an
adjustment in the cab within reach with 3 preprogramed settings. There great when there’s not a lot of variety
in what we’ll be lifting. Next is the Hydraulic
Force Control. HFC is a hydraulically controlled
automatic force system that will adjust the clamp force proportionally to the
weight of your load. This system is cool
because it requires no input from the operator as it works solely on its own to
apply the correct pressure to each load!
I read about, and I found all three of these in that Toyota article, is the
Adaptive Force Control. Kind of like the
HFC it automatically sets the pressure but there primarily used with roll paper
attachments. You’ll probably see these
regulators on the more advanced systems, ones using computer programs and they
can be adjusted right from a laptop or desk computer. Pretty high tech right?
all them time if It’s hard to learn to operate the slip sheet or clamp
trucks. It’s really just a
forklift. And as we’ve learned
experience is how we learn to drive a forklift.
I mean Safety is being a lift driver.
If we’re always focused on our environment, aware of our surroundings
and have been trained to the piece of equipment we’re driving I think any safe
lift driver can learn the clamp and slip sheet attachment pretty easily. The
key is to go slow and low, take your time, and again I’ll throw in my operate
it safely slogan. Oh, one more thing
about a slip sheet blade and your clamp blades, treat them right, don’t bend
them up or scrap them. Please don’t use
them improperly, there expensive to replace and you’ll end up damaging your
freight if there not true in any way.
Check them out on both your pre-trip and post-trip reports, it’ll keep everybody
more and more fork units have our scanning equipment actually mounted on our
lifts now. I saw a couple the other day
that were bolted to the headache bars or overhead grate of the lifts. Those are great, kind of out of the way and definitely
easier to use than a hand-held unit but I noticed because different operators
are different heights they can be in our way or line of site. Be sure that your comfortable and can see
well though. Let your maintenance department
know if it needs to be moved a little to the right or left, up or down. Be comfortable, I guarantee you’ll be more
a slip sheet or clamp truck holler at us,
[email protected]tell us a little about your experiences.
Remember to check in with us through out the week on Facebook and
Twitter too, using that @whseandops , I’m learning a lot from everyone on the
Warehouse and Equipment Operators Community on Facebook too!
next week, be productive, be prosperous and please be Safe doing it!