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alright let me tell you a little about the situation.

i work on a dock where we have about 15 lifts of varying makes. one of the lifts, a toyota 7 series, is much slower in travel speed than the rest of the lifts, far slower in fact. i believe that it was turned down quite a while ago because the previous operator had trouble driving, and the managers did not want him to damage any freight. now however, that guy is gone, and in his place is a skilled operator who gets quite pissy when it takes him twice as long as anyone else to work because his lift is so much slower.

does anyone know how to adjust this without calling the forklift service company and spending large amounts of money? Thank you in advance for your help.
  • Posted 7 Nov 2005 11:54
  • Modified 7 Nov 2005 11:56 by poster
  • By hoveraudi
  • joined 7 Nov'05 - 5 messages
  • Tennessee, United States

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Fact of the week
The word "robotics" was coined by Russian-born American science-fiction writer Isaac Asimov who first used the word in 1942 in his short story 'Runabout'. He characterised robots as helpful servants and as "a better, cleaner race."
Global Industry News
edition #1254 - 30 October 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News - As an industry, our focus is often on key economic indicators such as productivity and profitability, but we all know our sector simply wouldn’t exist without the skilled operators who bring the machinery to life... Continue reading
Editorial calendar - planned features
CONSTRUCTION FORKLIFTS
HANDLING GOODS IN THE COLD
LOADING/UNLOADING FREIGHT
BROWNFIELD AUTOMATION
FORKLIFT ATTACHMENTS
BATTERY AFFORDABILITY AND LIFETIME
FORKLIFT SAFETY
Global Industry News
edition #1254 - 30 October 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News - As an industry, our focus is often on key economic indicators such as productivity and profitability, but we all know our sector simply wouldn’t exist without the skilled operators who bring the machinery to life... Continue reading
Fact of the week
The word "robotics" was coined by Russian-born American science-fiction writer Isaac Asimov who first used the word in 1942 in his short story 'Runabout'. He characterised robots as helpful servants and as "a better, cleaner race."