LIFT AND PALLET
20200102197 ยท 2020-04-02
Inventors
- Philip A. King (Sugar Hill, GA, US)
- Jon P. Hassell (Atlanta, GA, US)
- William P. Apps (Alpharetta, GA, US)
- Dane Gin Mun Kalinowski (Foothill Ranch, CA, US)
Cpc classification
B65D2519/00467
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2519/00407
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B66F9/143
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2519/00796
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2519/00472
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D19/0018
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B62B2203/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2519/00338
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B66F9/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A pallet lift includes a pair of outer tines movable between an expanded position spaced outward away from inner tines and a retracted position adjacent the inner tines. The inner and outer tines are supported by wheels at locations spaced away from the lift mechanism. A pallet includes a plurality of nestable feet that open outwardly of the pallet to reduce the footprint. A second pallet includes a side wall extending downward from side edges of the pallet to define an opening adjacent outer feet.
Claims
1-20. (canceled)
21. A pallet lift comprising: a lift mechanism; a pair of tines connected to the lift mechanism, the pair of tines movable between a retracted position a first distance apart from one another and an expanded position spaced a second distance apart from one another, wherein the second distance is greater than the first distance; and at least one outer wheel supporting each of the pair of tines, wherein each at least one outer wheel is capable of being lifted off a floor on which the pallet lift is supported prior to the tines being moved to the expanded position from the retracted position.
22. The pallet lift of claim 21 wherein the pair of tines are outer tines, the pallet lift further including at least one inner tine between the outer tines.
23. The pallet lift of claim 21 wherein each of the tines is movable to lift the at least one outer wheel prior to the tines being moved to the expanded position from the retracted position.
24. The pallet lift of claim 23 wherein each of the tines is pivotable to lift the at least one outer wheel prior to the tines being moved to the expanded position from the retracted position.
25. The pallet lift of claim 21 wherein the lift mechanism is configured to raise and lower the pair of tines.
26. A pallet lift comprising: a lift mechanism; a pair of tines secured to the lift mechanism, the pair of tines movable between an expanded position spaced a greater distance from one another and a retracted position spaced a lesser distance from one another; and at least one outer wheel supporting each of the pair of tines, wherein each of the tines is movable to lift the at least one outer wheel prior to the tines being moved to the expanded position from the retracted position.
27. The pallet lift of claim 26 wherein each of the tines is pivotable relative to the pair of inner tines to lift the at least one outer wheel prior to the tines being moved to the expanded position from the retracted position.
28. The pallet lift of claim 26 wherein the lift mechanism is configured to raise and lower the pair of tines.
29. The pallet lift of claim 26 wherein the pair of tines are outer tines, the pallet lift further including at least one inner tine between the outer tines.
30. A method for operating a pallet lift including the steps of: a) lifting an outer wheel supporting each of a pair of tines of a pallet lift off a floor supporting the pallet lift; b) after said step a), moving the pair of tines toward one another or away from one another to adjust the distance between the tines; c) after said step b), lowering the pair of tines to place the outer wheels on the floor; and d) after said step c), lifting the pair of tines with the wheels on the floor to lift a pallet off a floor.
31. The method of claim 30 wherein said step b) includes moving the pair of tines toward one another.
32. The method of claim 30 wherein the pair of tines are parallel to one another before, during and after said step b).
33. The method of claim 30 wherein the tines are outer tines and wherein the pallet lift further includes a pair of inner tines and wherein the outer tines are moved toward or away from the pair of inner tines in said step b).
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0037] A pallet 10 is shown in
[0038] The feet 14 are hollow and are U-shaped in cross-section, opening outward. This reduces the footprint of the pallet 10, but optionally, the feet 14 could have an outer wall enclosing the feet 14. The feet 14 each include an inner wall 18, which may be corrugated as shown, for strength. The feet 14 each include opposed side walls 20 and a bottom wall 26. A horizontal reinforcing wall 22 connects the inner wall 18 and side walls 20 and is spaced above the bottom wall 26. A vertical reinforcing wall 24 extends vertically from the bottom wall 26 to the horizontal reinforcing wall 22. The deck 12 has an opening 28 aligned with each foot 14, leading into each foot 14, so that the pallet 10 is nestable.
[0039] The pallet 10 includes three feet 14 along each long side of the deck 12. The feet 14 are each open outward of the pallet 10. The feet 14 are each oblong, parallel to the long dimension of the pallet 10.
[0040]
[0041] An inventive lift 50 that can be used with the pallet 10 is shown in
[0042] Front wheels 58 located on an angled front of the tine 52, 54 prevent the tine from impacting a ramp and bottoming out.
[0043] A support mechanism 60 supports the tines 52, 54 in the retracted and expanded positions. The support mechanism 60 may include hydraulics or motors with threaded rods or other devices to move outer portions of the support mechanism 60 that are fixed to the outer tines 54 inward and outward relative to an inner portion of the support mechanism 60 that is fixed to the inner tines 54.
[0044] A lift mechanism 62, such as hydraulic, electric, etc, can raise and lower the tines 52, 54. The lift 50 also includes upright handles 64, which reduce the footprint of the lift 50 and permit easier handling in limited spaces. An activation handle 66 controls the raising and lowering of the tines 52, 54. A pair of rear wheels 68 supports the rear of the lift 50.
[0045] The upright handles 64 provide an alternative to transporting pallets. The upright handles 64 significantly reduce the required footprint to maneuver a pallet 10 in comparison to a standard pallet jack. Reducing the footprint increases the maneuverability of the upright pallet lift 50 and loaded pallet 10 in areas such as the back of the trailer or in a store.
[0046] This concept also has large surface areas over the handles 64 available for branding based on the customer's color(s) and logo(s). The large surface area of the shielding hides the hydraulic components used to lift the pallet 10. This minimizes the industrial look of the equipment in order to make it more acceptable for use in store.
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[0048] As shown in
[0049] As shown in
[0050] As shown in
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[0052] In order to convert the lift 50 from the compact configuration to the expanded configuration, several options are possible. First, as shown in
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[0054] As shown in
[0055] Alternatively, as shown in
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[0057] The lift 50, 150 may be modular. The upright portion of the lift 50, 150 could be provided with multiple fork tine 52, 54, 152 attachments with configurations available based on the users application. The user has the option of converting the fork tines 52, 54 152, regularly or using the upright pallet lift in a dedicated configuration. The modular approach is desirable for users as it provides asset flexibility regarding the lift based a variety of factors the user will encounter in a complex supply chain and unique store configurations during delivery. In addition, the modular approach provides an economical approach to when servicing a complex network. The alternative is to have multiple lift designs in the supply chain for multiple pallet sizes.
[0058] Common supply chain factors encountered include irregular trailer length and width, trailer loading equipment or requirements for specialty delivery pallets, standard pallets and specialty delivery pallets being combined for delivery on trailers and pallet configuration to optimize delivery. Unique store configurations result in delivery constraints including trailer offloading area, pallet staging areas, large and narrow door openings for the lift and pallet, large and narrow cooler door openings and aligning with store owners requests based on load size entering the stores.
[0059] The upright portion of the lift 50, 150 contain the hydraulic unit 62 used to lift the tines 52, 54, 152 and pallet load. By removing minimal amounts of hardware, the tines 52, 54, 152 can be separated from the upright portion of the lift 50, 150 and another set of fork tines can be selected for the supply chain and unique store configurations. As an alternative to the modular approach, each fork tine attachment could be designed in a dedicated configuration based on supply chain complexity.
[0060] A pallet 210 is shown in
[0061] The pallet 210 includes two outer or corner feet 214 and an inner or center foot 216 along each long side of the deck 212. The feet 214, 216 are each oblong, parallel to the long dimension of the pallet 210. Above each foot 214, 216 the deck 212 includes a recess 218, 220, respectively, sized to receive the foot 214, 216 of an identical pallet 210.
[0062] A side wall 222 extends downward from each side of the deck 212 to form the feet 214, 216. The side wall 222 also forms a ledge 224 extending from each corner foot 214 toward the center foot 216. Inward of the ledge 224 (between the ledge 224 and the center foot 216) is a key feature 226 projecting downward and inward toward the center foot 216. An opening 228 is formed through the side wall 222 above each ledge 224, outward of each key feature 226.
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[0064] The other half of the side wall 222 shown in
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[0068] Referring to
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[0070] Thus the fork tines 284, 286, 288 can be used to engage the long sides or short sides of the pallet 210. Further, referring again to
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[0072] In accordance with the provisions of the patent statutes and jurisprudence, exemplary configurations described above are considered to represent a preferred embodiment of the invention. However, it should be noted that the invention can be practiced otherwise than as specifically illustrated and described without departing from its spirit or scope.