Report this forum post

I was just fishing to see if it was possibly a common issue. Had one to lose bolts on rear trunion. Remounted the axle and replaced steer lines as these were destroyed. Installed proper bolts and lockwashers. Used blue thread locker and torqued to specs. Was not a fun job at all as the lift was in a tight space inside the mfg plant and could not be fished out due to weight issues and not another lift of equal or greater capacity to lift with. Was a pain but i and another tech somehow pulled it off.
  • Posted 10 Feb 2014 01:52
  • By RCAV8TOR
  • joined 12 Nov'11 - 366 messages
  • Alabama, United States
What i used to do all day now takes me all day to do.

This is ONLY to be used to report flooding, spam, advertising and problematic (harassing, abusive or crude) posts.

Indicates mandatory field
Toyota 3FD100
Yokohama, Japan
Used - Sale
Taylor THC500L
Coraopolis, Pennsylvania, United States
Used - Sale & Hire
Latest job alerts …
Prospect CT, United States
Philadelphia, United States
Dayton OH/Cincinnati OH, United States
Movers & Shakers
Rob Ott Rob Ott
Executive vice president and chief commercial officer, East Penn Manufacturing
President, Logistics UK
Director of dealer development East Coast, Big Joe Forklifts
Vice president, customer, TVH Americas
Fact of the week
Funerals in Spain typically occur within 24 to 48 hours of death, whereas in other European countries they wait one or more weeks. This rapid timeframe is a cultural norm grown from the past need to manage the warm climate without modern embalming.
Global Industry News
edition #1250 - 2 October 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we report on a case coming out of the US where two companies and their executives have been charged with defrauding the government, after allegedly importing forklifts from China , and then selling them to government agencies while misrepresenting their origins as being from the US... Continue reading
Fact of the week
Funerals in Spain typically occur within 24 to 48 hours of death, whereas in other European countries they wait one or more weeks. This rapid timeframe is a cultural norm grown from the past need to manage the warm climate without modern embalming.