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FS- Forklifts, inside manlifts and accessories

Milacron

Super Moderator
Joined
Dec 15, 2000
Location
SC, USA
1. 2001 Linde E20P...4000 lb capacity, IMHO, the ultimate electric forklift...4 wheels and *pneumatic* tires...and will turn in as tight an radius as a 3 wheel lift. 3 stage mast, 42 inch forks but 54 inch ones available. 48 volts. Has side shift capabilty but no side shift carriage on it presently. Typical dealer price on these is $8,000 to $16,000 (see www.eliftruck.com for examples), brand new tires (but not installed yet), battery is good, price on this one $6,500.

Btw, this thing will run outside without getting stuck where some LP pneumatics get stuck. The reason is most LP trucks are like a car...one wheel slips and the other wheel does nothing. On the Linde E20P, both drive wheels are independantly powered !

2. Daewoo BC25S... 5,000 lb electric, 3 stage mast, 4 valves (for side shift and fork positioning possiblities). Not sure of year...probably 1998 or so. Runs great but has no side shift carriage or forks. Battery iffy...ironically the battery looks like new but has sulfate on plates due to dealer not keeping it charged for years on the pallet before it was sold. Currently 48 volts but can be changed to 36 volts. FWIW, with this comes a complete decal and nameplate kit....I had the idea to complete restore this one to like new appearance but never got around to it...even have new aluminum nameplate with all data filled in.... $2,600

3. Long Reach paper roll attachment for Class 2. Appears to be NOS...perfect. Will grip and rotate under hydraulic control 360 degrees. Common as dirt in large Class 3 units, but very rare in Class 2 small size like this. I presume it could be used to pick up and rotate 55 gallon drums as well. Quick change hydraulic fittings. $2,500

4. Cascade slip sheet push/pull attachment, Class 2. Appears almost new. QC hydraulic fittings. $1,750

5. Cascade F55 side shift/fork positioner attachments, Class 2 Have 3 of them...all brand new, never used. The "catch" is they are wider than normal.. 49 inches wide...which is a good thing for outside lifts where extra fork spreads are a plus sometimes...but a bad thing for inside lifts where the extra width might get in the way in tight situations. (they are wider than a typical inside 4,000 lb lift by about 4 inches each side)
$1,850 each

6. Grove inside crane style manlift. Year 2000. Has the advantage over JLG type scissor lifts in that it can reach over machines or whatever to get to lights and such in tall buildings. Batteries were good last I checked two years ago, but need to recheck $3,850. Batteries are four deep cycle 6 volt batteries per side (i.e. 8 batteries total)

7. Bonzoni Class 3 side shift... new, never used $1,200

8. Baker 4,000 lb electric forklift. 2 stage mast, side shift. 1988 or so. Works fine but battery shot. (works enough to demo that all works ok but has a bad cell) No forks, but uses cheap and common class 2 forks. 36 volts. Clean unit, great tires. $1,250

9. Linde complete mast assembly, hoses and all...brand new, never used ! Class 2, three stage. Appears to be for a 4 to 5,000 lb cap. lift Would make for a fantastic "turn your truck or tractor into a forklift" conversion. $1,850.

10. Linde library...bookcase full of Linde shop manuals, parts books, etc $250

And yes, I know I need some pictures...here's a few...probaby not in order, but you can figure it out...

www.practicalmachinist.com/linde61.jpg
www.practicalmachinist.com/linde34.jpg
www.practicalmachinist.com/linde31.jpg
www.practicalmachinist.com/linde35.jpg
www.practicalmachinist.com/linde33.jpg
www.practicalmachinist.com/linde60.jpg
www.practicalmachinist.com/daewoo40.jpg
Re the Grove manlift...not mine, but here's a sistership... same model.. www.scissorlifts.ca/images/groveamz39e-manlift.jpg
And here's a sistership to the Baker forklift http://cdn3.iofferphoto.com/img/item/123/506/483/I8ts.jpg Mine looks a little nicer though.

[email protected]
 
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Milacron

Super Moderator
Joined
Dec 15, 2000
Location
SC, USA
So, is this the end of resale or you just shifting the surplus?
Nah.... I rented a small shop nearer to the house just for prototype work and need another forklift there. But came to realize I need at least 6,000 lb capacity...which none of these are....which got me to thinking about all the forklift "stuff" I have lying around that I've never even tried to sell....which got me to thinking I should sell some of it to justify the money blown on yet another forklift that is to come. Clear as mud ?

I hate to sell that little Linde electric...but can't justify it really...always thought I'd use it at the house or new shop...but it's just not big enough.

Much of the NOS stuff and the Linde shop manuals came from the bankruptcy auction of Piedmont Forklifts in your state years ago....why I bought those Linde books is beyond me now :nutter:
 

Mebfab

Diamond
Joined
Jun 7, 2003
Location
Mebane North Carolina USA
If not careful it is amazing what gets piled up. Constant diligence must be applied to clear out the clutter.


I thought you where selling the house. Working for asset sales or Uncle Myron or such.
 

Admin5

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 1, 2000
If not careful it is amazing what gets piled up. Constant diligence must be applied to clear out the clutter.
Heck, I didn't even list alot of "material handling" stuff I should sell... like a NOS Big Joe electric stradle lift, JLG model 1932 scissor lift, couple of electric pallet jacks, forklift parts bin, pallet racking (some uprights 10 feet high, some uprights 18 feet high)....ok, maybe that's all... can't sell the CAT 15,500 lb LP forklift...

Milacron

x190_706.jpg


pdi-500.gif
 

motion guru

Diamond
Joined
Dec 8, 2003
Location
Yacolt, WA
I could use that Grove if it wasn't on the opposite corner of the country - I suppose that would have to go on a flatbed LTL? Any idea what the rate might be to Vancouver, WA?
 

Milacron

Super Moderator
Joined
Dec 15, 2000
Location
SC, USA
I could use that Grove if it wasn't on the opposite corner of the country - I suppose that would have to go on a flatbed LTL? Any idea what the rate might be to Vancouver, WA?
If it took up less than 10 feet of trailer length and was less than 10,000 lbs I'd say $1,650....but I bet it's over 10K lbs...will try and find out the shortest length and the weight tomorrow.
 

Milacron

Super Moderator
Joined
Dec 15, 2000
Location
SC, USA
The Grove Manlift is a model AMZ39NE, year 2000 and weighs 14,500 lbs. The shortest it can be folded for shipping purposes is 12' 2" length and aprox 7' height. Ships from zip code 29916.

Max working height 39', with 21' max horizontal reach at 15' "up and over" height. At lowest point, overall height is 6'7" which allows the machine to travel through most shop doorways. Built in charger for the batteries.
 

motion guru

Diamond
Joined
Dec 8, 2003
Location
Yacolt, WA
Don,

Thanks for taking the time to get the size and weight. I am looking for a unit about half that size. When I saw the photo it didn't look that big.

groveamz39e-manlift.jpg


Looking at this, is it really 14,500? My dozer weighs only a few thousand more than that and it looks quite a bit bigger.

We rented a couple of units that went up to our 25 ft ceiling and could reach out a good 15 - 20ft from the base. I don't think they weighed more than 5000 lbs but I could be wrong. That is the size that would work best for our shop.

on edit - they were Genie Z-30/20N RJ lifts - and they were 14,420 lbs!! Never would of thought they were that heavy. Let me do some digging. Now if you had an 8000 lb capacity Linde - perhaps we could make a package deal.
 

Milacron

Super Moderator
Joined
Dec 15, 2000
Location
SC, USA
on edit - they were Genie Z-30/20N RJ lifts - and they were 14,420 lbs!! Never would of thought they were that heavy. Let me do some digging. Now if you had an 8000 lb capacity Linde - perhaps we could make a package deal.
Yeah, if it was 5,000 lbs it would fall over....has to have alot of counterweight to counteract the forces when the boom is fully extended.

And if I had an 8k capacity Linde I wouldn't be selling it ! In fact I took delivery just yesterday of an 8K Hyster (LP, cushion tires, 2005 year) for the new shop space. Got the "box car special" model so that it's physically not much larger than a typical 4K lift. Linde doesn't seem to make one that style, such that an 8K Linde is much larger...plus more expensive and harder to find in the used market....so went with the Hyster in this case.

hysterfork1.jpg
 
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smootz

Stainless
Joined
Dec 5, 2005
Location
Southern Ohio
Can you post or PM me all the details about the little scissor lift pictured in post #5 ? A local church here needs something similar to change lights and do maintenance in their small gymnasium.

SCOTTIE
 

motion guru

Diamond
Joined
Dec 8, 2003
Location
Yacolt, WA
That Hyster would be perfect for our shop - big enough to handle the machines we build and small enough to replace the 5k lift that we have that is regularly stressed to the max lifting one of our standard machines.
 

Milacron

Super Moderator
Joined
Dec 15, 2000
Location
SC, USA
That Hyster would be perfect for our shop - big enough to handle the machines we build and small enough to replace the 5k lift that we have that is regularly stressed to the max lifting one of our standard machines.
Yep...hard to find one with forks longer than 48" though.... and used forks longer than that are scarce as hen's teeth...so I had to buy brand new 60 inch forks for it. Funny how the photo angle sort of distorts reality....in the previous shot the forks look shorter than they are but in below photo they look longer than they are.. :crazy:

hysterfork4.jpg
 








 
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