IL23417A - Triple stage upright for lift truck - Google Patents

Triple stage upright for lift truck

Info

Publication number
IL23417A
IL23417A IL23417A IL2341765A IL23417A IL 23417 A IL23417 A IL 23417A IL 23417 A IL23417 A IL 23417A IL 2341765 A IL2341765 A IL 2341765A IL 23417 A IL23417 A IL 23417A
Authority
IL
Israel
Prior art keywords
assembly
pair
column assembly
upright
column
Prior art date
Application number
IL23417A
Original Assignee
Clark Equipment Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Clark Equipment Co filed Critical Clark Equipment Co
Publication of IL23417A publication Critical patent/IL23417A/en

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B66HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
    • B66FHOISTING, LIFTING, HAULING OR PUSHING, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR, e.g. DEVICES WHICH APPLY A LIFTING OR PUSHING FORCE DIRECTLY TO THE SURFACE OF A LOAD
    • B66F9/00Devices for lifting or lowering bulky or heavy goods for loading or unloading purposes
    • B66F9/06Devices for lifting or lowering bulky or heavy goods for loading or unloading purposes movable, with their loads, on wheels or the like, e.g. fork-lift trucks
    • B66F9/075Constructional features or details
    • B66F9/08Masts; Guides; Chains

Description

PATENTS AND DESIGNS ORDINANCE SPECIFICATION "TRIPLE STAGE UPRIGHT FOR LIFT TRUCK" We, CLARK EQUIPMENT COMPANY, a company incorporated in the State of Michigan, United States of America of Buchanan, Michigan, United States of America , DO HEREBY DECLARE the nature of this invention and in what manner the same is to be performed, to be particularly described and ascertained in and by the following statement: - uprights for lift trucks lifting elements, such as chains, wherein a pair thereof are disposed on each side of a lift cylinder, one of each pair of lifting elements being reeved on sprocket or wheel means having an axis transverse of the truck and the other of each of said pairs of lifting elements being reeve on sprocket or wheel means having an axis longitudinal of the truck, whereby to provide a combination of lifting elements which minimizes interference with operator visibility through the upright.
Other objects, features and advantages of the invention will readily appear to persons skilled in the art from the detailed description of the invention which follows.
Specifically, in carrying out the invention, there is provided a mast structure comprising laterally spaced-apart stationary uprights secured to the lift truck. Such uprights receive in forwardly offset nested relation a laterall spaced-apart pair of extensible uprights each of which is preferably I-shaped in cross-section, and which latter extensible uprights receive also in forwardly offset nested relation a second laterally spaced-apart pair of extensibl uprights each of which is also preferably I-shaped in cross-section. The load carriage is arranged to move up and down in the inner extensible uprights, and sets of rollers are provided between each pair of uprights and between the inner pair of uprights and the load carriage in order to provide full structural support both longitudinally and laterally of the truck during the raising and right from the lower end of the. first extensible upright. An intermediate cylinder of the telescopic ram assembly carries a pair of transversely spaced sprocket members, over which are reeved a pair of transversely spaced chains anchored at their one ends to the outer cylinder member of the ram structure and at the opposite ends to the load carriage. The first pair of sprocket means rotates on an axis transverse of the truck. A second pair of sprocket means are mounted in transversely spaced relation adjacent the lower end of the first extensible upright and are adapted to rotate about axes longitudinal of the truck. Λ second pair of lifting chains are preferably secured at their one ends to the outer cylinder of the telescopic ram and at their opposite ends adjacent the upper ends of said stationary uprights.
In the accompanying drawings, there is illustrated a preferred embodiment of the invention wherein: FIGURE 1 is a front view of au industrial lift truck showing the load carriage lowered to the bottom of the inner extensible upright, and exemplifying the good operator visibility which is provided through the upright construction; FIGURE 2 is an enlarged rear view of that portion of the upright shown in FIG. 1 which extends above the front portion of the truck* and shows a portion of the operator's compartment, all as viewed from behind the operator's seat on the truck; FIGURE 3 Is a full rear view of the upright shown in FIG. 1 with the entire upright assembly dismounted from the truck and the load carriage at floor level; FIGURE 4 is a view of the upright as shown in FIG. 3 with the load carriage elevated to a position adjacent the upper end of the retracted upright assembly; FIGURE 5 is a rear view of the upright assembly shown in the preceding figures, on a somewhat smaller scale, showing the entire assembly in a position of intermediate elevation with both pairs of extensible uprights in partially elevated position; FIGURE 6 is a broken- away rear view of the upright assembly, as is FIG. 5, in a position of maximum elevation of both the load carriage and the extensible uprights; FIGURE 7 is a view of the upright taken from above with the load carriage in the position shown in FIG. 4; and FIGURE 8 is a broken- away partial longitudinal sectional view of the telescopic ram structure which is utilized in the upright.
Referring now in detail to the drawings, a conventional industrial lift truck is shown at numeral 10 having a frame and body construction 12 mounted on a pair of steering wheels, not shown, at the rear end thereof and a pair of traction wheels 14 forwardly thereof, and embodying suitable power components, which may be either electric or gas, for operating the truck from an operator's compartment 16, which includes an operator's seat mounted above the engine compartment, operator's foot controls, such as accelerator pedal and brake, not shown, and a plurality of hand controls and instrumentation, such as is shown in FIG. 2, including a steering wheel 18, a control lever 20 for operating the upright and a power train control lever supported from the steering post. Atx operator is illustrated in FIG. 1 at numeral ZZ aa he would appear to an observer in front of the truck when seated on the truck in a normal position for driving the truck.
The upright assembly of the present invention is illustrated generally I at numeral 30, the assembly being mounted on the truck by means of a pair of rearwardly extending support plates 32 secured to a lower fixed transverse plate 34 of the upright assembly and adapted to be pivotably mounted by means of openin s 36 thereof upon bearing portions of the drive axle, not shown.
Brackets 42 secure the upper end of plates >Z to a lower fixed mast section 38 which includes a pair of transversely spaced opposed channel members 40 of substantially C- shaped cross-section. Channel members 40 are arranged to receive an intermediate mast section 44 formed of two laterally spaced I-beams 46, the intermediate mast section 44 being roller supported and arranged for longitudinal movement relative to the stationary rnaet sec¬ tion 38, as will be hereinafter described. In addition to the intermediate extensible section 44, an inner extensible mast section 48 is formed of two laterally spaced I-beams 50 which are tel scopically arranged inwardly of I-beams 46 for longitudinal movement relative to the stationary mast section 38 and to the intermediate mast section 44, the inner mast 4S being roller supported and arranged for longitudinal movement relative to the intermediate section 44. A load or fork carriage 51 is roller mounted for elevation in a well-known manner in inner mast section 48. A bracket 2 extends rear¬ wardly of each channel member 40 and is adapted to be connected to hy¬ draulic upright tilt cylinder maana, not shown, carried by the truck for tilting the upright longitudinally of the truck.
Mast section 38 i n cross-braced for rigidity By means of transverse intermediate mast section 44 is cross-braced by means of upper, central and lov/er transverse braces 56, 53 and 60, respectively, and inner mast section 48 is cross-braced by upper, central and lower brace members 62, 64 and 66, respectively. The upper cross-braces of the respective mast sections are arranged in vertically spaced relation to each other so that there is no interference therebetween, as shown in the figures, and the braces 64 and 66 of the inner mast and 58 and 60 of the intermediate mast are arranged so that they can pass inside of the various other cross-braces during extension and retraction of the upright, as shown in the figures.
The inner I-beam mast section 48 is nested within intermediate mast section 44 in such a manner that the forward flanges of I-beams 50 are disposed outside of the forward flanges of I-beams 46, and the rearward flanges of I-beam 50 are disposed within the adjacent channel portion and forwardly of the rearward flang s of I-beams 46, sets of rollers being suitably mounted between said adjacent pairs of nested I-beams 46 and 50 for supporting each o the I- be am3 50 longitudinally and laterally for extensible movement relative to the adjacent I-beam 46. The upper rollers of each said set are illustrated at 70 in FIG. 7. Similarly, I-beams 46 of the first extensible mast section 44 are nested in forwardly offset overlapping relation in respect of the flange portions of outer fixed channel members 40 of mast section 38, and are also mounted for telescopic movement outwardly of channel members 40 upon ; :', sets of rollers which support I-beams 46 longitudinally and laterally relative to channel beams 40. The upper rollers of said latter roller sets are illustrated at numerals 72. Cutouts 74 are provided at the upper ends of channel beams, and cutouts 76 are provided at the upper ends of I-beams 46 (FIG* 1) so that the rollers may be mounted within the respective mast sec- providing for by-passing of the rollers during assembly of the upright sections, and making available the use of relatively large diameter rollers 72 and 70 which extend through the respective cutout flange portions, said rollers being mounted upon the upper ends of upright beams 40 and 46, respectively.
The load carriage 51 is mounted in a well-known manner forwardly of the upright assembly, having a pair of transversely spaced fork bar members 80 (FIG. 7) secured to the load carriage and having mounted thereon upper and lower pairs of rollers, the upper rollers being shown at numeral 82, which supports the load carriage for extensible movement within the inner channel portions of I-beams 50. A pair of side thrust rollers 84 are connected] to the load carriage and are adapted to roll along the outer offset edge portion of each inner I-beam member 50, said pair of side thrust rollers 84 cooperating with the inner carriage support rollers 82 for preventing a tendency of the upright to spread apart or wedge when the load carriage is eccentricly loaded, and for resisting side thrust forces imposed upon the load carriage. The particularities of the nested offset I-beam upright structure, the mounting of the load carriage thereon and the manner of providing roller sets as aforesaid is explained in detail in the above-mentioned co-pending application, and need not be detailed further in this application. The importance of the forwardly offse nested upright structure in the present application is that such upright structure combines with my novel chain reeving structure to provide an improved upright, as will become apparent as the description proceeds.
A multiple cylinder telescopic hydraulic ram assembly is shown generally at numeral 90 (FIG. 8). It comprises essentially five hollow tubular f ..... .;. - . ■ members in concentric sliding relation wherein the inner tubular member 92 is secured at its base end 94 to fixed brace 34 at the bottom of fixed upright 38 and is adapted to be connected to fluid pressure pump means by a flexible conduit, not shown, at 96, thereby serving as a rigid upright conduit for communicating pressure fluid to and from the hydraulic ram assembly 90 through a controlled valve means 98 at the upper end of the inner tube 92, the tube 92 being of somewhat less length than outer upright section 38. A inner structural tubular member 100 is fixedly mounted at the lower end thereof to transverse brace member 60 at the lower end thereof intermediate beams 46* being open at both the top and bottom, having sealing means 102 slidable on the wall of inner tubular conduit 92, and a stop member 104 which is adapted to abut a stop 06 on conduit 2 when the tube 100 is fully extended, as in FIG. 6. An integral inner-outer tubular ram construction 108, 110 is threadedly secured at 112 to function as a single telescopic ram unit, and encompasses tube 100, inner tube 108 thereof being slightly less in length than the height of outer mast section 40 and having a closed head end 14 which is suitably connected at 16 to the upper transverse brace 62 of inner mast section 48. Nested within the longitudinal annular spaced provided between tubular members 108 and 110 is an intermediate hydraulic tubular ram 120 which is approximately one-half the length of outer upright section 38 and upon the upper end of which is mounted a cross head 122 to which is connected in transversely spaced relation a pair of sprocket members 124 which are mounted for rotation on outwardly extending stub shaft members 125 about an axis transverse of the upright. Suitable annular packing seals are provided at 126 at the upper end of outer tube 110, at 128 at the lower end of inner elevatable tube 100, and at 130 at the upper cross head end of intermediate telescopic tube 120. Pairs of stop means are suitably located at the upper and lower ends of adjacent telescopic tube members for limiting the extension of one relative to the other. A plurality of circumferential openings are provided at 132 in tubular conduit 92, at 134 in the inner tube 100, and at 136 in inner telescopic tube 108 for communicating the various longitudinal annular spaces between the respective adjacent pairs of tubular members one with another. r An anchor plate 140 i3 secured, as by welding, to the outer tube 1 0. Plate 140 includes a pair of transversel extending ear portions 142 which extend from opposite sides of plate 140 and a pair of rearwardly projecting ear portions 144. A first pair of transversely spaced chain members 146 are reeved over sprockets 124 on cross head 122 and securely anchored at their one ends to load carriage 51. Chains 146 are anchored at their opposite ends to ears 142 of anchor plate 140 by means of. a pair of long bolts 143 which extend through openings in the ear members and are secured thereto by nuts threaded on the ends of the bolts. Thus, the pair of chains 146 are adapted, in the first stage of elevation of the upright upon communication of pressure fluid to the telescopic ram assembly 90, to elevate load carriage 5} from the ground level position Ehown in FIG. 3 to a full "free-lift" position, as shown in FIG. 4, as intermediate cylinder ram 120 is initially actuated upwardly along inner extensible tube 108, thereby actuating cross head 122 . and sprockets 1 4 to elevate the load carriage at a 2:1 ratio of movement to cylinder 120 to effect such full free-lift movement of the load carriage while telescopic mast sections 44 and 48 remain fully collapsed within outer mast section 38. With the load carriage in a full free-lift position cylinder 120 is fully extended relative to cylinder 108 and stop members at the lower end of cylinder 120 contact stop members at the upper end of outer cylinder 110.
Pressure fluid acts on an area at the bottom of inner-outer cylinder assembly 108, 10 to hold said assembly down during extension of cylinder 120, and anchor plate 140 thus remains in a fixed down position, as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4.
A second pair of transversely spaced chains 150 are located at right angles to chains 146 and generally rearwardly thereof, being located in substantially co-planar relation in a plane which extends transversely of the truck at d reeved on a pair of transversely spaced sprockets 152 which are mounted on stub shafts for rotation at the lower end of intermediate mast section 44 on brace 60 and which are adapted for rotation about axes which extend longitudinally of the truck. The one ends of chains 150 are anchored by long bolts 154 to rearwardly extending ears 144 of anchor plate 140. The opposite ends of chains 150 re fixedly secured to upper transverse brace 53 adjacent the upper end of outer fixed mast section 38 by a pair of transversely spaced brackets 158 (FIG. 2) which are nested behind the rear flanges of the I-beams 46 of intermediate mast 44 and which extend inwardly and forwardly of brace member 53 so as to provide said substantially co-planar relation of chains 150 and a nesting of the upwardly extending lengths of the pair of chains, as shown in FIGS. 2-5, behind the flanges of the inner I-beams 50. The forward offset nested relation of the telescopic mast sections 44 and 48 relative to each other and to outer mast section 38 provide space as required to compactly and efficiently nest the pair of chains 150 behind the upright and the ram cylinder construction so that said pair of chains 150 does not interfere to any substantial degree with operator visibility through the upright when the load carriage is in any position from ground level to maximum elevation thereof.
Operation during the second phase of liftin from the position of eleva- tion of the load carriage shown in FIG. 4 to maximum elevation thereof, as shown in FIG. 6, is as follows: continued communication of pressure fluid with ram cylinder assembly 90 effects extension of inner-outer tube assembly 108, 110 together with intermediate cylinder 120 outwardly relative to inner ram cylinder 100, and elevation of the latter ram cylinder with the intermediate mast section 44 and outwardly along pressure feed conduit 2. As pressure fluid continues to be supplied to the ram assembly with the load carriage in the position shown in FIG. 4, simultaneous extension of the intermediate cylinder 120 and inner-outer cylinder assembly 108, 110 causes the anchor plate on the outer cylinder 110 to be elevated therewith, which applies tension to the pair of chains 150 such that said chains cause simultaneous elevation of intermediate mast section 44 out of outer mast 38, which in turn elevates simultaneously inner ram cylinder 100 on feed cylinder conduit 92, since cylinder 100 is mounted upon the transverse brace 60 near the bottom end of the intermediate mast section. It will be apparent that as the intermediate mast section is elevated by the chain action 150 as aforesaid inner mast section 48 is being simultaneously telescoped outwardly of intermediate mast section 44, and the net result is that the telescopic mast sections 48 and 46 are telescoped outwardly simultaneously from the FIG. 4 position to an intermediate elevation, as shown in FIG. 5, and thence to the maximum extension shown in FIG. 6. Throughout such elevation chain members 146 maintain the load carriage 51 adjacent the upper end of inner mast 48, and the telescopic ram assembly acting through the intermediate mast 44 by means of chains 150 and sprockets 152 effects such extension of the telescopic mast sections in relation to fixed mast section 38. Thus, a smooth and continuous elevation of the load carriage 51 is effected from ground level to maximum elevation at a constant speed of elevation, which is desirable.
Heretofore, to applicant's knowledge, in the telescopic upright art no triple-stage upright has been devised which is capable of a full free-lift load carriage operation and at the same time affords good operator visibility throughout the lifting cycle. In the FIG. 1 illustration, it will be noted that whenever the load carriage is in a load carrying position, i. e. , with the load carriage elevated slightly above ground level, the operator has "picture window" visibility through the upright. During elevation from ground level to maximum elevation of the load carriage, chain members 150 never afford any significant degree of interference with operator visibility, and this has not heretofore, to applicant's knowledge, been achieved in such an upright con* struction. Again, as previously noted, chain members 150 are continuously nested behind flanges of the inner mast section 48 or substantially behind tubular elements of the cylinder ram assembly, so that these chains never interfere to any substantial degree with operator vision. In the full free-lift triple-stage uprigh construction of the prior art this result has never been achieved... ' ■ t Although it is within the scope of the invention to provide chain reeving as described above in roller type uprights which do not provide forwardly offset mast sections, as best illustrated above in connection with the description of FIG. 7, it should be understood that the invention may be used most efficiently in an upright combination wherein space is provided between the mast sections in a direction longitudinal of the truck for reeving of part of the chains behind flange portions of the mast sections, as previously described. It may be possible to also utilize a chain reeving construction in eliding type uprights not utilizing roller mounted mast sections, althou h such an arran ement is not believed to be economically feasible or practical. It should be understood that chain members 150 can be anchored at the inner transversely spaced ends thereof not only to an anchor 140 located on the outer cylinder member 110, but also can be readily anchored in a fully equivalent manner to anchor portions which can be connected to, for example, transverse brace 64 of inner mast section 48, inasmuch as the outer cylinder 110 and inner mast * section 48 have no relative vertical movement to each other at any time.
Although J. have described and illustrated a preferred embodiment of toy- nvention, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that modifications may be made in the structure, form and relative arrangement of parts without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. According* ly, it should be understood that^ entend to cover by the appended claims all such modifications which fall within the scope of say invention. ύ claim:

Claims (2)

23417/2
1. Column arrangement for lift trucks, with φιτββφ telescoping column assemblies, each consisting of two lateral shafts and cross members, with an outer column assembly being fastened to the lift truck, a middle assembly arranged in said outer assembly, an inner assembly inside said middle assembly, and a load support inside said inne assembly, the column assemblies being movable in relation to one another; with a multi-element lift cylinder whose first element connects to the middle column assembly, while the second element surrounds the first and connects to the inner column assembly, while the third element surrounds the second and supports at its top end a pair of sprocket wheels, the axis of which extends crosswise to the driving direction; with a first pair of chains extending up and over the first sprocket wheel pair and down to a fastening point connecting to the inner column assembly; with a second sprocket wheel pair, on the middle column assembly, whose axes extend in driving direction, and with a second pair of chains extending from the outer column assembly,downward and over the second sprocket wheel pair and then up to the inner column assembly, characterized in that the second chain pair (150) is connected to a fastening element on the inner column assembly, approximately halfway up, and extends from there right down the lift cylinder and around the second sprocket wheel pair (152) , and in that the second chaifl pair (150) further extends fi'om the second sprocket wheel pair (152) upward to a fastening point on the outer column assembly and behind the shafts (50) of the inner column assembly, and that, inside a space which is formed therein, as usual, the outer column assembly consists of U-beams that face each other, and the inner column assembly of I beams, wherein the legs have about the same height, are arranged lengthwise in relation to the truck, and the profiles axe joined side by side, offset toward the front, in a way such that always the rear leg of a profile is located before that of the profile bordering on the outside.
2. Column arrangement relative to claim 1, characterized in that the second lift cylinder element (108) features a dual-wall design up to a point about halfway up the column, with the outer cylinder sleeve (110) surrounding the retracted third lift cylinder element (120) and featuring near its top end a radial flange (140) as fastening element for the chain pair (150) , the latter fastening on with its ends.
IL23417A 1964-05-18 1965-04-25 Triple stage upright for lift truck IL23417A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US368064A US3298463A (en) 1964-05-18 1964-05-18 Triple stage upright for lift truck

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
IL23417A true IL23417A (en) 1969-06-25

Family

ID=23449734

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
IL23417A IL23417A (en) 1964-05-18 1965-04-25 Triple stage upright for lift truck

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (1) US3298463A (en)
BE (1) BE663531A (en)
DE (1) DE1431608A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1071894A (en)
IL (1) IL23417A (en)

Families Citing this family (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3481498A (en) * 1967-06-12 1969-12-02 Clark Equipment Co Apparatus for reeving conduits in a triple section extendible mast
US3462028A (en) * 1967-06-12 1969-08-19 Clark Equipment Co Apparatus for reeving conduits in extendible uprights
US3506092A (en) * 1967-07-14 1970-04-14 Toyoda Automatic Loom Works Lift truck
US3653302A (en) * 1969-03-24 1972-04-04 Leo J Notenboom Hydraulic lift mechanism
US3768595A (en) * 1970-07-15 1973-10-30 White Equipment Co Lift truck mast
USRE30815E (en) * 1970-07-15 1981-12-08 White Farm Equipment Lift truck mast
US3871494A (en) * 1970-07-15 1975-03-18 Jr Wilfred H Kelly Lift truck mast
US3797587A (en) * 1972-01-03 1974-03-19 Robbins Co Sleeve cylinder powered drilling machine
US3968859A (en) * 1974-12-23 1976-07-13 Allis-Chalmers Corporation Multiple hose guide arrangement for a lift truck
US4009765A (en) * 1975-05-07 1977-03-01 Towmotor Corporation Adjustable lift chain anchor for fork lift mast units
US4339989A (en) * 1978-12-18 1982-07-20 Webster Raymond G Hydraulic rams
US4238004A (en) * 1979-07-18 1980-12-09 Cascade Corporation Hidden chain assembly for lift truck mast
JPS606598A (en) * 1983-06-27 1985-01-14 小松フオ−クリフト株式会社 Mast device
FR2578235B1 (en) * 1985-03-01 1988-04-01 Fenwick Linde HANDLING CARRIAGE COMPRISING A LIFTING MAT CONSISTING OF THREE ELEMENTS
US5586620A (en) * 1995-05-12 1996-12-24 Crown Equipment Corporation Remote viewing apparatus for fork lift trucks
EP1945555B1 (en) 2005-11-10 2013-01-02 Crown Equipment Corporation A materials handling vehicle with improved visibility

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2670811A (en) * 1949-01-17 1954-03-02 Towmotor Corp Multicylinder hydraulic lift truck
GB772610A (en) * 1954-05-14 1957-04-17 John Reginald Sharp Improvements in or relating to goods handling trucks
US2936047A (en) * 1957-10-16 1960-05-10 Yale & Towne Mfg Co Lift truck
US3077951A (en) * 1958-09-22 1963-02-19 Knickerbocker Company Lift truck mast operation sequence mechanism
US3208556A (en) * 1962-02-19 1965-09-28 Towmotor Corp Multiple stage masts for lift trucks
GB966123A (en) * 1962-05-07 1964-08-06 Lansing Bagnall Ltd Improvements in or relating to industrial trucks

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US3298463A (en) 1967-01-17
DE1431608A1 (en) 1968-11-07
BE663531A (en) 1965-09-01
GB1071894A (en) 1967-06-14

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
IL23417A (en) Triple stage upright for lift truck
US10023448B2 (en) Lift truck with mast
US3394778A (en) Lift truck mast assembly
US3202242A (en) Industrial truck with an elevatable operator platform that is movable with and relative to the load handling means
US3841442A (en) Lift truck upright
US3208556A (en) Multiple stage masts for lift trucks
JPH06227798A (en) Lift truck and freely stretchable mast structural body and method for controlling operational movement of this mast structural body
EP0003654B1 (en) Load-lifting assembly
US4848520A (en) Telescopic mast assembly
US4374550A (en) Upright for lift truck
JP2738454B2 (en) Mast equipment for lift trucks
US3489249A (en) Industrial lift truck
US5480275A (en) Fork lift truck
US4355703A (en) Upright for lift truck
US4356891A (en) Upright for lift truck
US3727781A (en) Lift truck load lifting mechanism
US4325464A (en) Lifting stand of a motor-driven truck
US4369861A (en) Multiple section mast with a pair of lift jacks behind the primary section uprights
IE20020724A1 (en) Improvements in and relating to fork lift trucks
US3997029A (en) Carriage hoisting arrangement for a lift truck
US4280592A (en) Full free-lift upright for lift truck
USRE27731E (en) Triplk stage upright for lift tkuck
US4432438A (en) Upright for lift truck
US4026432A (en) Lift-vehicle assembly
CA1097266A (en) Upright for lift truck