|
Five Storey Buildings No
Challenge For Telescopic Forklift
Durbanville building firm Atuba Construction believes it has
found the perfect fit in Manitou as a supplier of equipment
that precisely suits its materials handling requirements.
Having acquired a
telescopic rough terrain forklift early
last year from Manitou, the original inventor of rough
terrain forklifts, Atuba “has not even had a flat tyre” on
the machine during the construction of buildings up to 5
storeys high.
“The quality of a Manitou machine is outstanding,” enthuses
Atuba Construction’s Jacques du Toit. “On top of that, we
can carry out a host of other tasks with the machine that
previously required either additional equipment or manual
labour, with the related safety risks and cost involved.”
“With its 13m telescopic boom, this machine is everything I
need in the construction of single and multi-storey
buildings,” he continues. “No matter whether it involves the
positioning of columns, hoisting of bricks, plastering, lift
shaft construction or casting concrete walls, we do it all
with the Manitou, using several of the 38 standard
attachments available. Anything smaller would not have been
able to do all this work and anything bigger would not have
proved economical.”
A single
Manitou MT can lift, dig, load/unload, clean,
scoop, tow (up to 30t) and carry items weighing as much as
4t. Whether its task is to lift workers and material to
heights of up to 13m or the digging of foundations, Manitou
machines offer operators cab comforts ranging from air
conditioning to comfortable seating, ergonomically designed
switch-and-move joystick options and safety from falling
objects.
In addition to the large range of standard attachments,
Manitou frequently assists in the development of
custom
attachments as required. With only 60 seconds required to
change between attachments, one machine can carry out the
tasks of four others in a fraction of the time, requiring
only one operator, and while using far less fuel.
“As part of the sales agreement on our first Manitou,
Manitou sent specialists from Johannesburg to provide three
days of training on site, two theoretical and one
practical,” Du Toit reports. “This meant that two of our
three operators were brought up to speed with the important
aspects of correct operation, maintenance and protection of
the machine, to get more out of it while operating the
machine, but also to prolong its service life while
minimizing maintenance costs. We now have one operator
taking ownership of the Manitou, and he looks after the
machine, greases it, keeps it clean, fills in daily usage
reports, notifies us of services and so forth. I think it is
commendable that a forklift supplier also assists in
bridging the skills gap with regard to skilled operators.
They have realized that, in South Africa at present, it is
easier to arrange finance, import and purchase a
quarter-million Rand machine than to find a skilled driver
for it. Manitou’s ability to fully train and licence any
operators we may require will be a strong consideration for
us in future buying decisions.”
Should you require
any further information,
Click here to Enquire
|