Do scissor lifts require straps over the top?

Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by TravR1, Feb 16, 2022.

  1. TravR1

    TravR1 Road Train Member

    3,693
    9,581
    Nov 9, 2017
    TX
    0
    The customer told me I need to strap over the top in addition to the chains. The lifts I have seen didn't have staps.

    Its a full load with 13 lifts. I chained 2 or 3 in a group.

    Some of the lifts only have 1 chain point on the back side. So some of them only have 3 point contact.
     
    blairandgretchen Thanks this.
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. TravR1

    TravR1 Road Train Member

    3,693
    9,581
    Nov 9, 2017
    TX
    0
  4. God prefers Diesels

    God prefers Diesels Road Train Member

    4,198
    22,261
    Jun 26, 2020
    South Texas
    0
    You have to tie down things that are held in place by hydraulics. In this case, you're going to look bad if gravity all the sudden fails. Are you sure you like those odds?
     
  5. Kyle G.

    Kyle G. Road Train Member

    3,850
    20,210
    Jan 23, 2016
    Eastern Iowa
    0
    I’ve never seen them strapped over the top... maybe I missed something
     
    TravR1 Thanks this.
  6. TravR1

    TravR1 Road Train Member

    3,693
    9,581
    Nov 9, 2017
    TX
    0
    I don't recall seeing them strapped over the top either. Checked a YouTube video and searched a couple threads here.
     
    Kyle G. Thanks this.
  7. blairandgretchen

    blairandgretchen Road Train Member

    13,377
    71,914
    Dec 9, 2011
    South west Missouri
    0
    If the customer instructed you how to transport their products, I’d be inclined to comply.

    As @God prefers Diesels said - I thought it also fell under the same guidance of securing forks, or hydraulic powered attachments.

    But - I can’t recall ever seeing them strapped.
     
    GYPSY65, LoneRanger, Kyle G. and 4 others Thank this.
  8. TravR1

    TravR1 Road Train Member

    3,693
    9,581
    Nov 9, 2017
    TX
    0
    I thought maybe they were playing a joke on an obvious new guy.

    I only have wrinches for 10 of them. Lol

    They just told me it's a securement violation and I can get a ticket.
     
  9. blairandgretchen

    blairandgretchen Road Train Member

    13,377
    71,914
    Dec 9, 2011
    South west Missouri
    0
    Yeah - that’s a busy little load there already.

    You could finish out the last 3 with 2” straps and ratchets.

    Be a tired lad after cleaning up and putting away all that securement :)
     
  10. TravR1

    TravR1 Road Train Member

    3,693
    9,581
    Nov 9, 2017
    TX
    0
    Oh man... lol. Bummer. And I forgot to eat today.
     
  11. God prefers Diesels

    God prefers Diesels Road Train Member

    4,198
    22,261
    Jun 26, 2020
    South Texas
    0
    I was making a joke about the gravity part, but the rest is true.

    Would I strap them when they clearly aren't going UP? No.

    Would I strap them because the forklift driver said I should? I'd certainly give it a second look, because after all, they do the same thing every day, so maybe there's something to it.

    Would I strap them if the shipper said so? Yes.

    In retrospect, I probably should have said all this first, and made the lame gravity joke second. :)

    EDIT: As you'll read later in this thread, hydraulics aren't required to be tied down until the load hits a certain weight. Until then, it's just general freight.
     
    Last edited: Feb 17, 2022
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.