Buying Advice Homeowner Forklift

/ Homeowner Forklift #122  
My little 5k CAT is the handiest machine on the place sometimes.
My little compact telehandler is the handiest machine on the place sometimes:

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6 foot 1 cubic yard bucket
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42 inch forks:

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72 inch forks:

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/ Homeowner Forklift #124  
I think those are more money than a skidsteer?
But more versatile and less damaging to the ground. While skidsteers can be handy I certainly can't understand the great appeal they seem to have.
 
/ Homeowner Forklift #126  
But more versatile and less damaging to the ground. While skidsteers can be handy I certainly can't understand the great appeal they seem to have.

Because nothing else does the work they do. Sure a telhandler lifts pallets better but it can’t do the magnitude of other work a skid steer does.
 
/ Homeowner Forklift #128  
It does all the rough off road stuff but is $10k more than a regular forklift.

A pneumatic tire forklift is the only real option that has the lift capacity and fits the budget.
 
/ Homeowner Forklift #129  
Sure a telhandler lifts pallets better but it can’t do the magnitude of other work a skid steer does.
My compact telehandler will out work a skid steer and not tear up the ground. It has the same SSQA plate and hydraulic connectors as most skid steers.

Here it is with a 7 foot brush hog:

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And a 24 foot tall tree in the long arm tree puller:

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And rotated horizontal just for grins:

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/ Homeowner Forklift
  • Thread Starter
#130  
My compact telehandler will out work a skid steer and not tear up the ground. It has the same SSQA plate and hydraulic connectors as most skid steers.

Here it is with a 7 foot brush hog:

View attachment 2187726View attachment 2187727

And a 24 foot tall tree in the long arm tree puller:

View attachment 2187728

And rotated horizontal just for grins:

View attachment 2187729
Yes, they're awesome but how much more are they compared to skidsteers and forklifts? A lot of us would have one if it was affordable.
 
/ Homeowner Forklift #131  
I have used telehandlers/shooting boom lifts/Lulls many times; and they really do excel at unloading trucks, lifting trusses/bricks, ect. They also actually can grade in ways you wouldn't expect, as all I've used have a chassis tilt capability, and many have forks (impliment tilt), But, the material buckets are generally light duty for the size. I've never seen one that could run a hydralic cutter (except the on you show, which is cool), and in the boom repairs are extremely expensive. If loading/unloading trucks, or lifting material, they are the tool to have. I wouldn't buy one at market price as a generic "do all".

They do have general 3 steering options, front, all wheel, or crab. They have a nice low center of gravity, and are very capable though. They also start around $90k, compared to $75k. You have Way better visibility than a skid steer when moving material
 
/ Homeowner Forklift #132  
Oh, and with a Lull type machine, they are Heavy. When you have 28 ft of boom out, that counter weight is Working.

Lull644 weighs 24,000 lbs, and that's not a particularly large one.

the smaller Genie and Skytracks are a lot smaller,
 
/ Homeowner Forklift #133  
Yes, they're awesome but how much more are they compared to skidsteers and forklifts? A lot of us would have one if it was affordable.
My first compact telehandler was not new and cost $20,000. A 2004 Bobcat V518 bought in 2009:

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/ Homeowner Forklift #134  
I do mention the in boom repairs, because we damaged several through the years. You have chains, cylinders, and like 120 lf of hose that require complete disassembly to repair. It can easily be 16+ hours of mechanic time, and a crane, to pull the boom segments and repair and reassemble. We were told, true or not, that putting down pressure and/or heavy pulling pressure was the cause of the internal boom damage.
 
/ Homeowner Forklift #135  
The flip side, engine access is Fantastic on the Lull/Cat/Gradall/Genie models I've been on. You can almost climb inside the engine compartment
 
/ Homeowner Forklift #136  
Because nothing else does the work they do. Sure a telhandler lifts pallets better but it can’t do the magnitude of other work a skid steer does.
I have not been impressed the times that I have used one.
Yes, they are quick moving and turning and have good visibility forward.
However, they are also rough riding, bouncy, confining, difficult to enter or exit, they tear up the ground with the tires or tracks scuffing everything around while turning, extremely difficult to exit with some implements especially when cab equipped, noisey. no rearward visibility and minimal side ways.
 

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