Dock bridge trims costs for fitness equipment manufacturer.
ICON Health & Fitness Inc. (Logan, Utah, www.iconfitness.com) gets Americans out of their seats and onto their
feet with a well-known array of fitness brands including
NordicTrack, HealthRider, Proform, Reebok, Weslo, Image, Weider and FreeMotion. It has 11 locations around
the world and in 2005 produced nearly 4 million units of fitness
equipment. The company's 2006 sales topped $852 million.
Continued growth led ICON to move distribution to a new
600,000-sq.-ft. facility in July 2005 near the port in Savannah,
Ga. The facility does 12 turns a year with brisk traffic during
the holidays. Along with full trucks going off to retail locations,
the facility also processes individual orders coming off of infomercials, direct mail and its website. It's people also perform
some light assembly. All in all, the new DC helped ICON get
its product to market more effectively. Nevertheless, there were
a
ADVERTISEMENT
|
few problems adjusting to the new building, particularly in
regards to lift truck access.
Some product comes from Asia through the Port of Savannah and arrives via container. The problem arose when lift
trucks attempted to back out of the trailer with a load of product. "We had edge-of-dock levelers and the bump on their ramp
caused the load to hang up between the roof of the container and
the dock doorway lintel," says Darren Turley, DC manager.
Though this did not happen all the time, drivers would often
use one of the large-wheel lift trucks to muscle their way over the
bump. But when traffic got busy some of the drivers would not
have these trucks available to them. When the lift truck got stuck
in the doorway the crew had to take time to get a yard jockey
to raise the truck to smooth out the incline. Furthermore when
boxes got wedged coming out of the truck, there was the risk of
damaging product.
The solution was the LoadHog (Carrollton, Texas, www.theloadhog.com) modular dock bridge. "The LoadHog offers
a much more gradual incline and our loads do not get trapped
in the dock door," Turley says. ICON's own employees installed
the dock bridge. Four bolts anchor it to the floor and eight attach the bumper assembly to the dock wall.
The design of the dock bridge stands up to ICON's heavy
products—dumbbells, exercise bikes, elliptical machines and
treadmills. When the truck is ready to be accessed and the
doors are open, the user steps on the LoadHog's side mounted
pedal to enable the vertically stored platform to descend into
place until the lip contacts the truck bed. Once in place a security latch engages the spring counterbalance mechanism
to ensure the bridge remains downwardly biased. When the
truck is ready to leave the user pivots the operating handle to
raise the deck to its stored and locked position. Ergonomically
friendly, only 38 lbs of force is needed to raise the ramp, and
no is bending required. When stored LoadHog protects the
dock door against lift truck damage and provides protection
against energy loss since the overhead door can close tight to
the warehouse floor.
For its many customers, ICON Health & Fitness equipment
defines fitness and helps its consumers lose weight. The new
dock bridge helps ICON's dock to be in great shape as well.
|
|
|
Once the truck is ready to leave the
dock, just 35 lbs of force is needed
to raise the LoadHog dock bridge
platform into position.
|
|
|
|
In the erect position, the LoadHog
protects the dock doors against
damage from forklifts.
|
|