Discussion:
Towing with forklifts

My position at work is that forklifts may not be used for towing, or modified for towing purposes, without the written approval of the manufacturer. Years ago, my plant saw an opportunity to reduce the size of their industrial vehicle fleet my fabricating tow hitches and attaching them to the counterweight either by welding, bolting, or direct attachment to the recovery hook/pin. This appears to be contrary to guidance found in ASME B56.1 as well as OSHA 1910.178; has anyone else experienced or seen this type of misuse? Thanks in advance from the new guy.
  • Posted 13 Dec 2007 07:22
  • By waldrm
  • joined 13 Dec'07 - 1 message
  • North Carolina, United States
Mikeylikesit
Showing items 1 - 1 of 1 results.
On this message board, HS&L, go down about 15 items and you shall find "using forklift to push cargo'.

Push, pull, pull, push. Who cares? If you are not lifting, or picking up and carrying, then you have the wrong truck. Forklift, not forkpush, not forkpull. Forklift!! Got it?
  • Posted 13 Dec 2007 08:59
  • By dan_m
  • joined 14 Oct'05 - 335 messages
  • Ontario, Canada
Constantly Lifting The Standard!

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The word "okay" (or its abbreviation "OK") originated as a humorous misspelling. In the 1830s, a fad in Boston involved using abbreviations of intentionally misspelled phrases. "OK" stood for "oll korrect," a playful mispronunciation of "all correct".
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edition #1245 - 28 August 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at MHEDA’s Q3 Economic Advisory Report which reveals current resilience in the US materials handling sector... Continue reading
Global Industry News
edition #1245 - 28 August 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at MHEDA’s Q3 Economic Advisory Report which reveals current resilience in the US materials handling sector... Continue reading
Fact of the week
The word "okay" (or its abbreviation "OK") originated as a humorous misspelling. In the 1830s, a fad in Boston involved using abbreviations of intentionally misspelled phrases. "OK" stood for "oll korrect," a playful mispronunciation of "all correct".