Hi all,
I am shopping for a new forklift - considering Doosan, Toyota, CAT, Mitsubishi, Crown, Yale, Clark... maybe a couple others, that's all I can remember.
Anyhow, rather than start a new post, I figured this has been asked before. Looking for advice, brand recommendations (found a post from 2010 that Clark is THE WAY to go)... etc.
I have two 5,000 pound machines in house right now, and they've been workhorses. One is an Allis Chalmers, the other is a Kalmar AC. Looking to (probably) replace the Kalmar AC.
So, if anyone can point me in the right direction (or maybe this WILL start the discussion of the top 3 forklifts in 2019)... that'd be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Jon
Showing items 1 - 5 of 5 results.
You seem to be a person that keeps your lift for a very long time. Allis-Chalmers Material Handling went out of business in 1986, the reemerged as ACMH for a few year and were bought out by Kalmar, Sweden and operated as Kalmar AC and Kalmar AC was around until about 1999/2000 when Komatsu bought them out. Komatsu provided trucks to to Kalmar AC with only a paint job & decal difference and were sold through a different dealer organization. The Kalmar AC dealer organization (or Tusk) no longer existed as of about 2005. All that means is that keeping eithre of these truck you have up adn running migth prove to be a challenge in the future. I suggest you strongly consider buying a the new truck from the dealer that you are currently using to keep your existing truck up & running. They know you and your equipment. Others may not be as resourceful.
Do all the things others have already suggested
But remember a few things 1.)Being big is not always mean better. I worked for two big dealers and their main focus was on large accounts vs the 1-2 truck users - main reason it easier to help pay the bigger fixed operating cost associated with being big. 2.) Being #1 in the business only means the next position one can move to is less than #1 - ask Sears Roebuck & Company, General Motors, etc. etc.
3.) Some dealers will represent more than one product line of the same type products - in a couple case two companies builds two brands at the same production facility with the only differences are paint, decals and marketing policies and very little technical differences, if any. I can think of two. When a dealer represent several brands of truck from different manufactures - do your best to find out what dealers resources are dedicate to the brand you are considering - by resources I mean service parts on the shelve and lead time if not (sometimes 90+ days to get a part from overseas is not good) technically trained (certified)technicians on the product you are looking at, rental units available if a unique type truck etc.
pick the brands you might want to use, ask for demo's so you can determine which one has the best features that you and your operators like best.
Then through word of mouth and some research find out what you can about the dealers service and parts. Most reputable dealers do have a rating and if you know anybody else that deals in management dealing with forklifts ask them how their servicing companies do.
Truck design and performance and dependability does play an important part in effective and efficient operation of your material handling but more importantly the quality of service you get from your representing dealership's service and parts dependability are a key factor on how that plays out as well.
It's more than the forklift, or the dealers location. It's all about the dealer. Purchase a main brand forklift that has the dealer support behind it. What is their satisfaction policy? What if the forklift has a failure not covered by warranty but is still relatively new? Is it too bad for you or will the dealer step up? A dealer that supports their customer first will only sell quality forklifts. We all get focused on price but there is much more to an investment of a forklift than just the price.
And don't get so many quotes. It is a very competitive industry. If you stay with the the major brands you will get a decent and dependable forklift truck.
There is no need to do a lot of research. Pick a truck that you and your drivers like and buy it from someone you trust.
Go with the closest dealer that is an authorized dealer for the brand you chose. After the warranty time frame, unless you have a full maint contract service charges and travel time billings will be a part of all billings. You also have a little more pull with a factory dealer than an independent. Yes phone calls and e-mails to the factory doo seem to work unless it is a Chinese made unit. Stay with the domestic brands or Japanese or Korean dealers. They will work with you.
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