A hydraulic cantilever tail lift on the back of a truck
A tail lift is a mechanical device permanently fitted to the back of van or lorry, which is designed to facilitate the materials handling of goods from ground level or a loading dock to the level of the load bed of the vehicle, or vice versa.
The majority of tail lifts are hydraulic or pneumatic in operation, although they can be mechanical, and are controlled by an operator using an electric relay switch.
The use of a tail lift can obviate the need to use machinery such as a forklift truck in order to load heavy items on to a vehicle, or can be used to bridge the difference in height between a loading dock and the vehicle load bed.
The first tail lift system was developed in 1970 by ZEPRO Z-Lyften Produktion AB (now part of HIAB Group), in Sweden.
Tail lifts are available for many sizes of vehicle, from standard vans to articulated lorries, and standard models can lift anywhere up to 2500kg.
Contents
//
Types
There are two key types of tail lift available to operators these are:
Column lifts
Column lifts are often mechanical, although they can be hydraulic or pneumatic. They run on ‘tracks’ fitted to the rear of the vehicle. From the tracks, a folding platform extends, which can be taken up and down.
Column lifts have the advantage of being able to lift to a higher level than the load bed (and are therefore suitable for loads over more than one level in the truck. They are usually the easiest of the lift types to fit, as they require little structural work.
The disadvantages of column lifts include that the platform is only usually able to operate at a 90° angle from the track, meaning that on uneven surfaces, the lift will not meet the ground properly.
Cantilever lifts
The cantilever lift is the type first developed by Zepro. They operate only on a hydraulic or pneumatic system. The system works by a set of rams attached to the chassis of the vehicle. These rams are on hinges, allowing them to move angle as they expand or contract. By using the rams in sequence, the working platform can either be tilted, or raised and lowered.
Cantilever lifts have the advantage of being able to tilt, which means they can often form a ramp arrangement, which may be more appropriate for some applications. It also means that it can be easier to load or unload on uneven ground.
On some models, the ramp can be tucked away under the load bed of the vehicle, leaving the option of it not being used when at a loading ramp, and giving access and egress for operatives without the need to operate the lift.
References
- ^ a b “Zepro Tail lifts product history”. Retrieved on 2007-06-05.
- ^ “Ratcliff Double Tier Lift”. Retrieved on 2007-06-13.
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tail_lift”
- AeroVironment SkyTote
The SkyTote is an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), tail-sitting Vertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL)-fixed wing hybrid plane, which attains the advantag...
- HICE forklift truck
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards.
Please improve this article if you can. (December 2008)
It has bee...
- Dautel
Dautel is a German company, headquartered in Leingarten, manufacturing hydraulic tail lifts and dumpers for trucks. It is one of the several German co...
- Heavy lift
This article does not cite any references or sources. (March 2008)
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unve...
- SkyCat
SkyCat (a portmanteau of "Sky Catamaran") is a class of proposed heavy-lift and ultra-heavy-lift hybrid aircraft which derive more than half of their ...
- Sidelifter
This article does not cite any references or sources.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable mate...
- Container crane
Container ship "Rita" being loaded at Copenhagen by a portainer crane
A container crane (also known as a portainer, container handling gantry cr...
- Sidelift
Sidelifters are a road going truck or semi-trailer that is used to hoist and transport ISO standard containers over generally longer distances. The Si...
- Slip Sheet
Slip Sheets are thin pallet-sized sheets made of plastic or fibreboard, used in commercial shipping.
Contents
1 Description
2 Slip Sheet Types
...
- Aeroscraft
This article contains information about a scheduled or anticipated future aircraft.
It may contain preliminary or speculative information, and m...
- Future aircraft developments
A number of ideas are being worked on for future aircraft developments. Some are new, some have been tried before but may prove more practicable with ...
- Pallet jack
Manual pallet jack
This article does not cite any references or sources. (June 2008)
Please help improve this article by adding citations t...
- Forklift truck
"Pallet truck" redirects here. For the smaller pallet-moving tool sometimes called a pallet truck, see pallet jack.
A US airman operating a forkli...
- Flettner airplane
A flettner or rotor airplane is a conventional airplane without wings. Instead, a rotor airplane flies through the use of the Magnus effect, hereby ha...
- Roll-on/roll-off
Main article: Merchant ship
Loading a ro-ro passenger car ferry
Roll-on/roll-off (RORO or ro-ro) ships are ferries designed to carry wheeled...
- Wikipedia:Manual of Style (disambiguation pages)
This guideline is a part of the English Wikipedia's Manual of Style. Editors should follow it, except where common sense and the occasional excepti...
- Pallet
The classic wooden pallet
A plastic pallet with nine legs, which can be lifted from all four sides
A metal palet with removable beams....
- Logistics automation
Logistics automation is the application of computer software and / or automated machinery to improve the efficiency of logistics operations. Typically...
- Cargo
To comply with Wikipedia's quality standards, this article may need to be rewritten.
Reason: Portions of this article's content was merged from F...
- Authorized Economic Operator
This article or section may contain an excessive amount of external links.
Please improve this article by incorporating them into the appropriate...
Comments