How Do Cold Starts Cause Downtime on Lift Trucks?

ForkliftsKonecranes
Kona Cranes Forklift with Coil Ram Attachment at Steel Mill

Executive summary: Cold starts cost you uptime in two ways. A machine that has gotten extremely cold and sat for a long time often will not start at all, and if you do get it running, the oil is so thick that it strains the pumps, the engine, and the transmission. Both paths lead to downtime. Konecranes lift trucks address this with onboard plug-in heaters that warm the hydraulic fluid, coolant, engine oil, and transmission oil from a single plug, so the machine is ready to work without shortening its life.

Why Does a Frozen Machine Cause Downtime Before the Shift Even Starts?

When a machine gets extremely cold and has sat unused for a long stretch, you are often not going to be able to start it at all. That is lost time before any work gets done, because the truck simply will not turn over when you need it.

How Does Thick, Cold Oil Lead to More Downtime?

If you do manage to get a frozen machine started, you are going to be running on really, really thick oil. That thick oil is very hard on your pumps, very hard on your engine, and very hard on your transmission, and that strain on the machine is what leads to downtime.

How Do Onboard Plug-In Heaters Protect Your Uptime?

Konecranes designed these units with onboard plug-in heaters for the hydraulic fluid, the coolant, the engine oil, and the transmission oil, all running off one plug. You plug your cord into the machine and it heats all of that up warm enough that you know you will be able to do your job, and you are not negatively affecting the life of the machine.

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