Take Part in the Lift Truck’s Rebirth
Productivity and safety are driving research and
development for lift truck OEMs. More than ever, the end user is in the
driver’s seat for vehicle design.
By Tom Andel, chief editor
Influence is rampant in the lift truck industry. It’s
shaping the design of the vehicles you rely on to keep material moving through
your plant or warehouse. Europe. The Environmental Protection Agency. OSHA. The
automotive industry. Electrical utilities. All of these entities have influenced
the latest lift truck design trends. But as diverse as they seem, these
trend-setters share a common interest: your operator’s productivity.
Power play
The market is pretty evenly split between fuel- and
battery-powered lift trucks. But neither side is content to keep it that way.
Both are battling to conquer their shortcomings — emissions on the fuel
side and the need for longer duty cycles on the battery side. Technical
advances are resulting in cleaner internal combustion engine models as well as
electric-powered trucks that operate longer between battery charges.
Alternative fuels like compressed natural gas (CNG) have
been talked about as possible solutions to the carbon monoxide emission
problem, but until recently the infrastructure to support fueling stations was
insufficient. That’s why companies like the Kingdom Group, headquartered
in New York City, have dedicated themselves to providing an affordable,
fast-fill CNG fueling infrastructure.
Kingdom handles everything from conversion, station design,
equipment installation and regulatory approvals. Service is aimed at private
fleet operators in all industries. And with the EPA’s goal to
significantly reduce the exhaust emissions of spark-ignited engines by 2004,
companies like Kingdom, as well as NESC Williams in Cleveland and FuelMaker
Corporation in Toronto, are using established customers in the airline industry
as a point of entry for establishing a fueling infrastructure for lift trucks.
Fresh air
Industrial truck manufacturers are doing everything they can
to find ways to help customers comply with pending EPA clean-air regulations.
They’re getting a head start by concentrating on their markets in
California, where the California Air Resources Board (CARB) has already set the
standard for emission limits. For example, Nissan launched its “Breathe
Easy” campaign, offering its CARB-compliant H20-II and H25 four-cylinder
engines on its 3,000-8,000-pound cushion and 3,000-6,000-pound pneumatic
models. These engines feature electronic feedback systems and three-way
catalytic converters.
Twenty-five percent of the engine-powered product Nissan and
any lift truck vendor sells into California this year has to be CARB compliant.
This percentage increases every year — 50 percent in 2002, 75 percent in
2003, and total compliance in 2004. In 2004, Federal EPA is expected to adopt
the same standard with some variations for the entire country.
“The requirement will be for a clean-air, low-emission
lift truck for everyone in the U.S.,” says Keith Allmandinger, director
of marketing and product support for Nissan Forklift Corporation North America.
“The clean air engine adds somewhere from $700-$1,000 to the price of the
truck, but with the low emissions and the benefit to the employees, you’re
getting the ease of an IC truck. If you run a shift and a half, you won’t
require the second battery you’d need to power an electric.”
Mitsubishi Forklift Trucks is also selling product with
cleaner running engines in California and making them available throughout
North America. While the company wants to capitalize on the benefits of the new
engine systems, it must also be sensitive to the concerns of its
price-sensitive markets.
“We’ve opted not to take a price increase
associated with the implementation of this system,” says Fred Mallett,
manager of product development for Mitsubishi Forklift Trucks. “Even
though there is an associated cost increase for the manufacturer, this is
outweighed by the marketable benefits to all end users.
“Apart from the low emissions, there are stipulations
on extended warranties in California for fuel system components over and above
our standard warranty,” he continues. “It’s adjustment free,
and the components are tamper resistant. Controls are sealed so that there are
no adjustments required on the fuel system. It’s managed by an electronic
control system. In fact, the management of the fuel system is more like an
electric truck than a conventional IC truck.”
Lift truck OEMs with roots in the automotive industry have
adopted manufacturing efficiencies to help them afford the product support and
innovation discussed here. Jack Shnelly, product support manager at Hyundai,
explains:
“We’re targeting the 3,000- to 6,000-pound lift
truck market, LPG systems and diesel. When I toured Hyundai’s automotive
plant in Korea, the car was hardly touched by human hands in final assembly.
They set up the same type of JIT efficiency in building the lift trucks they
ship over here for us. That’s how they’ve been able to keep costs
down.”
Hyundai’s industrial truck presence in the U.S. is
growing. It has 40 dealers in place and plans to add another 20 by the end of
the year.
What AC adds
AC motors have been generating a lot of interest in the lift
truck world lately. The trend started overseas but is making its way to the
U.S.
Germany-based Jungheinrich is testing the waters in America
with its product lines. It started developing and offering AC sit-down trucks
in 1998. Today about 80 percent of its 4-wheel electrics are AC trucks. In 2003
its 3-wheelers will have it, and by 2005 Jungheinrich expects all its electric
lift trucks to be sold with AC motors.
AC offers the following advantages:
• Travel speeds up to 12.5 mph and lift speeds up to
108 fpm;
• Up to 30 percent less energy consumption than
conventional electric lift trucks due to highly efficient controllers and
regenerative braking;
• Totally enclosed motors, gears and multiple disc
brakes that are maintenance free (no contactors or brushes).
Toyota Material Handling USA has invested a lot of R&D
capital in AC motor control to bring electric lift trucks into greater power
parity with internal combustion engine models. It will follow last year’s
launch of an AC pneumatic 4-wheel electric model with a cushion-tire version
this year. Why is Toyota pursuing AC so aggressively?
“We’re finding that the AC drive system results
in more battery life than the DC system,” answers Brett Wood,
Toyota’s national product planning manager. “That means getting
more work done with the same battery using conventional charging
methods.”
Wood explains that many users of electric lift trucks run 8-
to 10-hour shifts. When the vehicle runs down to 20 percent discharge before
the end of a shift, the operator then has to leave his/her work environment, go
to a battery changing or charging station and hook up the battery, or pull it
out and put in another.
“That’s lost productivity,” he adds.
“That’s why we’re focusing on adding battery life.”
Another strategy for doing this involves converting the
inertial energy generated while braking and reversing to electrical energy and
sending it back to the battery. Toyota is adding another form of regenerative
energy to new models, combining it with its AC drive motors. It’s done while
coasting to a stop.
“Even when coasting for a few feet the motor is
retarding the speed, and the new lift truck will coast to a stop
quicker,” Wood concludes. “The braking force produced by the motor
generates electricity, which is retrieved by the battery. It’s not
abrupt, but it gives better control to the vehicle, extended brake life and
more energy returned to the battery.”
Advances like this lead many to believe that electric lift
trucks are closing the application gap between themselves and IC-powered lift
trucks. Explains Kim Wanamaker, vice president of sales and marketing for
Drexel Industries LLC, these AC components result in lower discharge levels per
cycle and thus longer battery life. Drexel offers AC as standard on its MDR
line of multi-directional reach trucks for narrow-aisle applications.
“The cost of AC is coming down as more manufacturers
offer the option,” he adds. “The operator gets improved operation
during a shift and longer operating periods between charging.”
Users in the U.S. can thank improvements in lift truck
controls for AC’s arrival on American turf. Mark Rossler, corporate
marketing manager for Linde, explains that the higher voltages used in Europe
— 72 to 80 volts — made better use of AC until now.
“When you’re operating at a higher voltage,
you’re operating at a much lower amperage,” he explains.
“That makes it possible to run the trucks more aggressively, generating
less heat in the process. One of the drawbacks to AC is the controller; in the
process of converting the voltage, it generates a lot of heat. Any time you
generate heat on an electric truck, that’s lost efficiency. The newer
controllers are becoming better and more efficient.”
AC is far enough along from a development standpoint where
the advantages of higher travel speeds and better shift life are making it more
attractive to the U.S. market. Rich Robinson, vice president of engineering for
Drexel, adds that with those improved controls, AC is more effective with the
48-volt systems more common in this country. Whether it will work its way down
into vehicles with lower voltages remains to be seen.
Incentives for electric
The electric lift truck is gaining allies among electric
utility companies around the country. Many point to the environmental concerns
associated with internal combustion. Some are even starting to offer incentives
for going with electrics. And with the promise of electric automobiles
continually stalling out in Detroit, lift trucks may provide utilities with an
attractive alternative showcase for the power of electricity.
“Once we saw there would be no profits in the short
term [coming from the Big Three], we started looking more closely at the
non-road side of transportation, including lift trucks,” says Bob
Hawkins, manager of electric transportation for Alabama Power Company. “A
lot of the lift truck and battery dealers were looking for someone who would
help them market their products, so we made a point of forming partnerships
with the dealers throughout Alabama.”
Three years ago this utility company developed an incentive
program wherein it pays $100 to the dealer for every Class 1 and 2 electric
lift truck it sells, and $50 for every Class 3. As a result, the power company
got back in business about 54 times what it paid out in incentives, and the
market is growing.
Hawkins admits that electric lift trucks don’t fit
every application, but in most they are cost comparable — sometimes, with
a little help. Where the cost of batteries and chargers might make electrics
the more expensive choice, Alabama Power is looking at financing those items at
an affordable rate and making them an operating line item on the
customer’s power bill.
Another strategy to make electric lift trucks more
attractive is to make some of these extra items unnecessary. Fast-charging is
being pitched as a way to eliminate battery changing equipment and even battery
rooms. This is a relatively new technology that delivers a charge current up to
four times higher than conventional chargers.
Several battery manufacturers have expressed reservations
about the safety of this technology, but providers of this equipment have
answers to those concerns.
“We’ve tested the top four or five
manufacturers’ batteries and exchanged information with manufacturers
about how fast-charging reacts with the battery and vice versa,” says
Peter Michalski, director for the Edison Minit-Charger, a product of Edison
Source. “We’re now approaching more than 300,000 shift hours of
fast charger use. The battery manufacturers are realizing that if you
fast-charge correctly there isn’t a negative impact on the battery.
Operators can charge during shift breaks, shift changes and lunch breaks. With
the correct ratio of chargers to trucks in a facility, state of charge throughout
the course of the day will fluctuate between 40 percent to 80 percent. The
owner may see savings anywhere between 10 percent to 30 percent over a
battery-room-oriented operation.”
Michalski says that once all the battery manufacturers are
on board with fast-charging, their products will evolve to make them even more
fast-chargeable. Lift truck design will also change, he says, with connections
and cabling becoming integral to the back end of the lift truck.
AeroVironment, makers of PosiCharge equipment for
fast-charging, provides different types of chargers for different types of
operations. Its ELT 600 and 750 models fast-charge 48-volt lift truck packs
while the ELT 680 fast-charges 80-volt packs. Ford Motor Company’s
Dearborn Assembly Plant has been using this equipment successfully with its
lift trucks for two years while American Airlines uses AeroVironment’s
MVS multi-vehicle fast-charger for its ground support equipment.
“The primary cost advantage is increased
productivity,” says Larry Hayashigawa, product manager with
AeroVironment. “The lift truck driver doesn’t have to leave his job
for a half-hour to change a battery. A battery attendant doesn’t have to
drop off batteries. You have fewer battery movements because you have fewer
batteries, and you’re not pulling them out as often. The higher the
battery-to-truck ratio is, the more the return on investment. If you’re
doing 2.2 battery changes a day, we estimate the lifecycle savings are $15,000
to $18,000 a year, which will pay for the fast charger in the first
year.”
What’s coming?
The best way to ensure long lift truck lifecycles is to
employ operators who’ll take good care of them. That’s where the
U.S. can learn a few lessons from Europe. Even the leading lift truck makers in
this country agree that European employers do a better job with operator care
and maintenance.
“Europe seems to have more of a stakeholder mentality
where North America has more of a shareholder mentality,” says Mike
Gallagher, vice president of design at Crown. “With a stakeholder
mentality there tends to be more input among all those involved in the lift
truck decision. As such, the culture is one where operator creature comforts
are a given.”
Gallagher points to the fact that on European reach trucks,
full seats are standard. But he adds that if you look at warehouse tasks
anywhere around the world, operators have to get on and off the truck
frequently to work the load.
“That’s one reason Crown offers a stand-up reach
truck with a tiltable seat,” he continues. “It lets operators sit
occasionally, but can also allow for an immediate change to the standing mode.
This makes for a flexible truck that provides for operator comfort and
efficiency.”
Rick Haines, product advocate at Raymond Corporation, says
standing is often the way to operate in warehousing operations, and lift truck
manufacturers in the U.S. and abroad are finding ways to make that more
comfortable.
“I think there’s a trend to stand-up
counterbalanced trucks,” he continues. “As people look more at the
application rather than submit to the emotion of sitting down, they start
realizing that standing up is a very comfortable and very productive way to do
things — especially if you’re on and off a truck all day
long.”
John Feeley, president of Schaeff, sees benefits to both
positions. That’s why this company, which has specialized in three-wheel
stand-up narrow-aisle lift trucks for years, is finally offering customers a
chance to sit down.
“We’ve entered into an agreement with an Italian
manufacturer and are exploring opportunities to expand our product line in the
next 12 to 24 months,” he says. “It’s a sit-down model that
will be produced in Italy. Once demand for the product outpaces manufacturing
capability at that plant, we’ll begin producing it here in
America.”
Feeley expects other operator-oriented features that are
popular in Europe to make their way to the U.S. For example, many European
trucks have fully integrated, multi-function controls in the arm rest. This
puts control of all functions at the operator’s fingertips. He also sees
value in adopting the 4- to 5-inch-diameter steering wheel, adding to control
and operator comfort.
“The more we can win that operator over feeling
comfortable, safe and productive in our product, the more likely we’ll
close that deal with the owner,” Feeley adds.
Many material handling purists have lauded the futuristic
lift trucks exhibited in Germany at the Hannover Fair as representative of a
new global standard of excellence. Although many of those features are still
too expensive for American tastes, they still have the power to influence.
“The Hannover Fair has had a major impact on the
design, manufacturing and engineering of all Hoist lift trucks,” says
Nick Marshall, marketing manager for Hoist, which acquired the assets of Elwell
Parker last year. “The design trends in lift trucks are very similar to
what we’ve seen in automobiles. On the exterior, square, sharp lines are
being replaced by flowing, rounded edges. On the interior, operator controls
are wrapped around the driver — within easy sight and reach.”
Will workers in American plants and warehouses soon be
driving lift trucks with rotating cabs that swivel 180 degrees in either
direction and have rear-mounted masts? That’s not gee-whiz technology any
more. And some lift truck manufacturers say it’s viable and justifiable
from a safety aspect alone.
“If the operator could swivel that entire cab and move
that truck in either direction with full visibility, that’s a neat
feature,” Feeley concludes.
Jere French, vice president of TCM Lift Trucks, says some of
that innovation isn’t so new. “That rear-mounted mast was
implemented with Allis-Chalmers Corp. back in 1970,” he notes.
“There were 37 patents left on it at that time. The operator had the
ability to select what he wanted to do with the cab, if he wanted to stay down
or go up with the load. We never manufactured it because it was too costly, but
some of the patents that came out of it were implemented in our electric trucks
at the time and into our IC product.”
We’ve covered many innovations in this article, many
of which were user-driven. The message is clear. Tell your needs to your
dealer. That’s how great lift trucks are born. MHM
For More Information ...
Information on lift truck vendors can be accessed through
our Web site: www.mhmanagement.com. Contact information for the companies
mentioned in this article is listed below:
AeroVironment, www.posicharge.com
Clark, www.clarkmhc.com
Crown, www.crown.com
Drexel, www.drexelindustries.com
Edison Minit-Charger, www.edison-source.com
FuelMaker, www.fuelmaker.com
Hoist Liftruck, www.hoistlift.com
Hyundai, www.hyundai.com
Jungheinrich, www.jungheinrich.com
Kalmar AC, www.kalmarac.com
Kingdom Group, www.thekingdomgroup.com
Komatsu, www.komatsuforkliftusa.com
Linde, www.linde.com
Mitsubishi Caterpillar Forklift America, www.mcfa.com
NESC Williams, www.nesc-williams.com
Nissan, www.nissanforklift.com
Raymond, www.raymondcorp.com
Schaeff, www.Schaeff.com/Inc
TCM Lift Trucks, (713) 681-8888
Toyota, www.toyotaforklift.com
Yale Materials Handling, www.yale.com
Getting the Right Charge
At the least, fast-charging technology shot a load of energy
into a somewhat complacent battery industry. There are strong opinions about
this method, pro and con.
The moderate opinions, however, will say that no battery
charging method fits every application, which, of course, is true. Therefore,
here are a few factors you need to consider when deciding how to keep your lift
trucks moving.
Fast charging is controversial primarily because it could
fundamentally change how many batteries you buy and how often. It will also
change how the industry measures battery life. The number-of-years measure will
go out in favor of a more accurate measurement — amp-hours.
“Fast charging can eliminate battery
change-out,” says Cal Tanck, director of marketing, GNB Industrial Power.
“You may need fewer batteries on site, and you won’t need a battery
room, which also eliminates those problems.”
Agreed Rick Hancock, western regional manager, Enersys Inc.,
“You could use two-thirds fewer batteries for an operation, which can be
a huge cost savings.
“There’s little advantage to fast charging on
single-shift operations,” continued Hancock. “On two-shift operations
that also involve battery change-out, fast charging can save money.”
In general, lift trucks may not need three batteries each.
Often 2.25 or 2.5 batteries per truck are sufficient for most applications. For
pallet trucks, you may need only 1.5 batteries per truck.
“But, the way we all evaluate battery life, in
calendar years, needs to change,” added Tanck. “We need a measure
that indicates how much literal power is available in a battery, which means
you need to know its amp-hours.” Tanck explains that the battery industry
assumes users are charging a battery once a day, equalizing it and letting it
cool, and that’s how they determine the average battery has a five-year
life. But if you charge it two or more times a day, you still have a
“five-year” battery life, you’re just using it up at a faster
pace. “No one’s developed a good, inexpensive way to measure
amp-hours out of a battery yet, because batteries are commodity products. But
once they do, the industry will issue warranties based on amp-hours instead of
years of life,” continued Tanck.
Fast charging is different from what’s usually called
opportunity charging, even though both are done during breaks, shift changes
and shut-down periods.
“Fast charging puts significantly more energy into a
battery,” said Larry Hayashigawa, product manager, AeroVironment.
“In addition, most fast chargers have excellent monitoring systems to
minimize heating and adjustcharging algorithms to maximize charge efficiency.
“Opportunity charging, if done properly, can help a
truck that requires, say, 20 percent more charge to finish off the day without
having to resort to a full battery change,” continued Hayashigawa.
“It’s most useful in charging applications where energy usage is
typically less than the equivalent of 1.2 batteries per day. When trucks
require 1.5 batteries or more per day (an additional 50 percent charge), then
fast charging is a solution. It can keep trucks between a 40 percent and 80
percent state of charge without overheating or changing a battery. So you
don’t have to recharge up to a full 100 percent. You can pick up extra
juice for a few extra hours.
“Bear in mind, though,” continued Hayashigawa,
“that unlike fast charging, opportunity charging does not measure battery
temperature. The possibility of overheating a battery is an ongoing
problem.”
Presently, fast charging is used on wet-cell batteries.
“There are very few lead-acid batteries we’re aware of that
don’t work with fast-charging systems,” said Hancock.
“We’ve had an installation at Nestle for three years. Actually, you
shouldn’t opportunity charge a lead-acid battery. A short-charge is still
considered a cycle, so you’re using up cycles out of your battery. It
should always undergo a full charge, followed by a watering, and then an
equalization. But most operators won’t or can’t do that.”
Engineers at MTC think it’s too soon for fast
charging. But they do agree that opportunity charging has drawbacks. “It
can shorten the life of the battery,” said Terry Orf. “The average
battery has 1,500 cycles, but actual run-time hours will be a different number,
usually less.”
Use of fast charging on gel batteries is still under
evaluation. Gel batteries tend to have a higher internal resistance, which can
result in faster battery overheating. And regardless of charge method, the key
to proper charging is to control temperature rise in the battery cells.
The need for better temperature monitoring systems is
probably the single most important aspect to come out of the recent developments
in battery charging. Most developers of fast chargers have accurate monitoring
systems to ensure a battery doesn't get overheated. Opportunity charging
systems typically don’t monitor battery temperature at all.
“Ideally, battery charging and battery maintenance
should be automatic,” said Hancock. “The battery should hook up,
charge, equalize, and so on without operation intervention. That’s really
what the industry wants and needs. Operators have other things to think about,
like moving loads.”
But Orf brings up other concerns. Interested parties dispute
the need for, let alone potential importance of, many of these concerns, so be
sure to investigate before you buy. Orf says battery design needs to change to
accommodate the larger influx of current. “It’s not the size of the
cables on the outside,” said Orf, [although in most cases batteries need
larger cables to handle the extra current] “it’s the plates on the
inside that need to be able to carry more current.”
Others, like Waseem Ahmad, vice president of engineering at
Hawker Powersource, mention the need for changes in venting to help cool
batteries.
If fast charging is not for you, it doesn’t mean your
charging options are limited. Technical developments are influencing other
charging systems, making them more efficient and able to charge better.
Technologies like switchmode/high frequency provide more DC output from power
coming out of the wall. Power factor correction is big in Europe and may come
here soon. It changes the frequency, resulting in more power. It’s a more
efficient charger with smaller components. And, along with fuel cell
developments, smaller systems will likely be the next changes to watch in
charging technology.
— Leslie Langnau, senior technical editor