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More than transporting, lifting and storing

More than transporting, lifting and storing

Efficient forklift use in practice

Effective is not automatically efficient

Effectiveness means achieving defined targets – such as high turnover rates or short throughput times. Efficiency goes one step further: it describes how much effort is required to achieve these goals.

An example from e-commerce:
A warehouse can turn over its entire inventory within 24 hours. If this target can even be achieved in 20 hours, this is undoubtedly effective. However, if an oversized fleet of forklift trucks, high labour costs, a lot of damage, frequent downtime or uncoordinated loading cycles have to be accepted, efficiency suffers – and ultimately profitability.

This shows that good performance alone is not enough. It must also be provided at a reasonable cost.

Not every forklift truck application needs optimisation

At the same time, it is important to remain realistic.
Not every company needs to analyse its forklift use down to the last detail. Anyone who uses one or two forklift trucks occasionally – for unloading pallets or storing materials, for example – uses the forklift truck primarily as a practical tool. In such cases, the benefits are obvious: time savings, relief for employees and greater safety.

© Mitsubishi EDIA EM FB14-20(C)N2T Series

The situation is different when forklifts are an integral part of the value chain.
For example, in beverage wholesaling with indoor storage, outdoor areas and additional event services. Here, forklifts, pallet trucks and drivers are an essential part of daily business. Precision, availability, safety and speed have a direct impact on costs and revenue. In such environments, it is worth taking a closer look.

When others achieve more with less effort

The desire for optimisation is often not driven by the company itself, but by comparison:
A competitor achieves similar handling figures, but works with fewer machines, fewer staff or lower costs. This is the latest point at which processes, vehicle fleets and operating times are scrutinised.

The first step is always an honest stocktaking:

  • How have routes, warehouse structure or types of goods changed?
  • How many hours are the forklifts actually in use?
  • Are there many empty runs or downtimes?
  • How are machines and loads handled in everyday life?
  • Do all vehicles fulfil the current safety requirements?

These questions can often still be answered “from the gut” in small fleets. However, this becomes increasingly difficult as the number of vehicles grows.

Data instead of gut feeling

The larger the fleet, the more complex the evaluation becomes.
Manual recording of operating times, driving behaviour or downtimes is hardly realistic in day-to-day business. It costs time, ties up staff and often only provides snapshots.

This is where telematics comes into play.

© Mitsubishi PREMIA EX PBR20-30N2 Series

Efficiency gains through telematics

Telematics systems record relevant data directly on the vehicle: usage, operating times, battery status, driving behaviour or load on the components. This information is analysed centrally and creates an objective basis for decision-making for the first time.

Typical questions can thus be clearly answered:

  • Which forklifts are heavily utilised – and which are hardly utilised at all?
  • Where do many empty journeys occur?
  • At what times do load peaks occur?
  • How do driving styles and utilisation differ between individual drivers?
  • When does maintenance make sense before failures occur?

This is particularly important for retailers:
Telematics does not replace experience – it supports it with facts.

The right machines for the right tasks

Efficient fleet management does not mean using as many vehicles as possible, but rather providing suitable vehicles for specific tasks.

A simple practical example:
A company uses telematics data to recognise that several electric forklift trucks with a high load capacity mainly travel short distances, rarely pick up loads and have long idle times. The analysis shows that some of these tasks could be better performed by low-platform trucks. Replacing machines not only reduces the vehicle fleet, but also the personnel and maintenance costs – with the same performance.

Such decisions can hardly be made on a sound basis without data. Telematics makes them comprehensible and economically justifiable.

Conclusion

Efficient forklift truck utilisation does not start with technology, but with an understanding of your own processes.
Telematics is not an end in itself, but a tool for creating transparency, recognising potential and making well-founded decisions. For dealers, this knowledge opens up one thing above all: the opportunity to provide customers with better advice – practical, comprehensible and based on real usage data.

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The future of intralogistics: will forklift trucks be replaced by AI robots?

The future of intralogistics: will forklift trucks be replaced by AI robots?

A reality check between Industry 4.0 hype and Logistics 5.0

Digital change is accelerating. Algorithms, artificial intelligence (AI) and autonomous systems seem to be outsourcing the logistical skills of entire forklift truck driver teams – firmly anchored in the belief that technology can do everything more efficiently, faster and cheaper. The focus of Industry 4.0 is clearly on automation, networking and maximising profits through digitalisation.

But while we are talking about fully automated “dark warehouses” in which armies of robots take command, a more nuanced picture is emerging. Experts are already talking about Logistics 5.0, where people are once again taking centre stage – supported by resilience, sustainability and ethical work design.

The reality of automation: limits and risks

Digital warehouses, controlled by AI, are a reality today. However, fully automated systems are only efficient as long as the parameters remain static. The Achilles heel of full automation is its rigidity:

  • Maintenance intensity: Repairs to the control system can lead to long downtimes.
  • Domino effects: A system failure often paralyses the entire flow of goods, with repercussions all the way to the end customer.
  • Investment risk: The smaller and more complex a warehouse (“brownfield”), the less profitable the use of highly complex AI systems becomes.

The players: Who will be travelling through the warehouse of tomorrow?

  • AGV / AGV (Automated Guided Vehicles): Follow rigid lines or wires.
  • AMR (Autonomous Mobile Robots): Navigate freely using SLAM technology (Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping).
  • Cobots: Collaborative robots that assist humans instead of replacing them.
  • Special robots: From palletisers and shelf-scanning robots to autonomous storage and retrieval machines.
© Mitsubishi GRENDIA ES FD20-35N3 Series
© Mitsubishi SENSIA EM RB16-25N3(H)(S)(X) Series

Why the forklift truck stays:

  1. Flexibility: For unforeseen operations, complex loading and unloading of lorries or bulky goods, the man-machine combination is unbeatable.
  2. Smart Forklifts:Modernforklifts are networked. Telematics systems provide data on impact loads, maintenance intervals and route optimisation.

Conclusion: symbiosis instead of displacement

The answer to the question of the future is therefore not “man or machine”, but “man with machine”. If you want to remain competitive, don’t dispose of your forklift trucks, but integrate them into an intelligent, digital overall system.

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New forklift trucks? New warehouse? Or everything new?

New forklift trucks? New warehouse? Or everything new?

Small and medium-sized companies in particular find it difficult to make the right decisions when investing in logistics.

When internal logistics, from warehousing to order picking to shipping, repeatedly come to a standstill due to growing volumes, quick action is called for.

This does not only apply to the trade. Building contractors as well as medium-sized and small companies are often faced with the problem that too much time is lost until all machines, equipment and materials are on the construction site. Too small outdoor storage areas and too narrow aisles in the halls, no system, tools that are too old or unsuitable (forklifts, wheel loaders…) – the reasons are numerous, as are the hours lost every day.

You won’t find any solutions or instant help in this article, but you will find simple examples that will make you think and perhaps help you to improve your own logistics quickly. However, speed should not be equated with quick, hasty action. So don’t just go ahead, plan, rebuild and buy. Good advice is often not expensive. The analysis of a logistics expert probably saves (a lot!) more money than it costs.

© Mitsubishi EDiA EM 3 wheel
© Mitsubishi AXiA EX Sit-on

An example: The warehouse is too small! All the shelves are crammed full and the forklifts can barely drive through the aisles. A new hall is needed, larger and with wider aisles. It can be done, but maybe it doesn’t have to be: perhaps it’s better to make the aisles narrower and thus create deeper shelves, which means more storage capacity. Narrow-aisle forklifts, high-lift order pickers or driver’s seat high-lift trucks then take care of storage and retrieval. These then transfer the pallets to forklift trucks, of which far fewer are needed in this system than before. It is easy to calculate whether this is the right approach.

If it turns out that this conversion is not sufficient for the future handling volume, the next step can be to make calculations for conversion to semi-automatic or fully automatic, driverless warehousing. The construction of a new warehouse should also be included in the calculations.

In all planning and calculations, all operating costs must always be taken into account, depending on the operating time. Let’s stick with the example described above: building a new warehouse with more rack space and slightly wider aisles, but otherwise a twin of the existing warehouse, is the cheapest purchase. But more forklifts and more drivers are needed. If you add up the purchase of the machines and the operating costs for people and machines, the apparently cheapest solution becomes a cost trap, and another variant, such as a fully automated 4.0 warehouse, is suddenly the price-performance winner.

Time is also a decisive factor. Not only the time lost in searching, clearing back and forth, but also time that has been wasted because everything has always gone well so far. These are often small and medium-sized companies where working methods and warehouse structures have not been adapted to actual requirements over the years. We are talking about the beverage store with 2 forklifts and 5-10 high-lift trucks, the building materials trade with forklifts and wheel loaders or the tiler with tile storage and sales.

Those who wait until almost nothing is moving before investing in their fleet and warehouse often make hasty decisions in the hope that everything will be fine afterwards. It is better to buy time with small investments, used industrial trucks and rented storage space to get professional advice and weigh up all the options.

© Mitsubishi PREMiA ES Pedestrian

Warehousing and transportation are a complex business.

There is no one-size-fits-all solution for all jobs. Every transport operation and every workplace has its own individual requirements, its own challenges and its own standards. The right choice of technology and storage locations makes every operation more efficient, more productive and safer. And regular review – has the situation changed, are there different standards, are the machines still optimal for the job, what is the competition doing better or worse – makes the difference between success and decline.
When it is time to replace or expand the equipment fleet, it is always advisable to re-evaluate the requirements and the complete warehouse setup. Are new specialized forklifts perhaps the better choice for this or that task?
It’s old wisdom: if everything fits together, if the machines are matched to the application, this promotes efficiency. Even small changes can have a big impact. There is no warehousing without risk. A holistic approach that takes energy efficiency, sustainability, location advantages and future prospects into account reduces the risk of making the wrong decisions.

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Ana Fischer


Country Manager Spain

+49 941-942794-24