I worked in a warehouse for a huge company. And the rule was if anything slips or falls while trying to grab pallet of racking then you had to stop what your doing, radio the team leader to give you the ok to proceed. He should have also lifted a little before tilting back
I am a safety manager, so I am looking at the root cause. Why did it fall? Forks were only half in. Why? He couldn't pull all the way in. Why? Because there was inventory on the floor in front of the rack. The next 2 whys have to be answered by the company, but it seems to be common practice to leave product in front of the racking. That is the root cause of this incident.
This is all wrong. Operators fault. Not the company. Only way it's the companies fault is the fact that they have an untrained Operator trying to do this without supervision. But he had like 8 chances to just stop and get someone with experience. As soon as he tilted back I could tell how fucked he was. And as a "safety manager", you don't even call him out for being lazy and not moving the stuff on the floor? Or realize that the stuff on the floor wasnt even in the way. Since he clearly pulled in between both, just not far enough. I wanted to make a bet that you're not a safety manager and never even sat on a forklift. But mid typing, I remembered that you "safety managers" and "production managers" are just clueless when it comes to actually Operating any equipment besides a keyboard. Which you've done(poorly) here.
@ 0:18 u can clearly see bad practice. How did he get a fork truck licence! Even once its part way on the forks he doesnt bother to lift it higher. So he goes back in bending the shelving in (instead of putting it back an picking it up properly. Which he should have done in the first place! So he then lifts it up, making the load even more precarious as it tilts forward. Then he lifts it up even further, so it's at a 45% angle. So he decides to lift it even higher, going past the angle for recovery Then he withdraws, pulling his forks away from the pallet, perched precariously on the shelving. Gets out an removes a loose board. Then moves forwards an proceeds to damage the box containing the scrap, so it spills out Vid then ends! (they should have showed all of it) Where is his logic? Should have been sacked immediately!
I worked in a warehouse for a huge company. And the rule was if anything slips or falls while trying to grab pallet of racking then you had to stop what your doing, radio the team leader to give you the ok to proceed. He should have also lifted a little before tilting back
Anyone that has at least 2 years experience driving a forklift everyday for work is cringing right now!
Bro I drove a forklift for less than a year and I immediately saw a multitude of issues lmao
Dude looks like he's never been trained beyond how to go forward
Has this guy been trained?
At my job this would have been an incident and the worker and supervisor would have been terminated immediately
This guy doesn't know when to stop
I am a safety manager, so I am looking at the root cause. Why did it fall? Forks were only half in. Why? He couldn't pull all the way in. Why? Because there was inventory on the floor in front of the rack. The next 2 whys have to be answered by the company, but it seems to be common practice to leave product in front of the racking. That is the root cause of this incident.
This is all wrong. Operators fault. Not the company. Only way it's the companies fault is the fact that they have an untrained Operator trying to do this without supervision. But he had like 8 chances to just stop and get someone with experience. As soon as he tilted back I could tell how fucked he was. And as a "safety manager", you don't even call him out for being lazy and not moving the stuff on the floor? Or realize that the stuff on the floor wasnt even in the way. Since he clearly pulled in between both, just not far enough. I wanted to make a bet that you're not a safety manager and never even sat on a forklift. But mid typing, I remembered that you "safety managers" and "production managers" are just clueless when it comes to actually Operating any equipment besides a keyboard. Which you've done(poorly) here.
Looking at the state of that warehouse I guess that training was just one of many things missing from the list of stuff to do!
Your content is so touching
Why keep moving it? The whole thing is about to collapse!!!
The box is not strong enough for the load
@ 0:18 u can clearly see bad practice. How did he get a fork truck licence!
Even once its part way on the forks he doesnt bother to lift it higher.
So he goes back in bending the shelving in (instead of putting it back an picking it up properly. Which he should have done in the first place!
So he then lifts it up, making the load even more precarious as it tilts forward.
Then he lifts it up even further, so it's at a 45% angle.
So he decides to lift it even higher, going past the angle for recovery
Then he withdraws, pulling his forks away from the pallet, perched precariously on the shelving.
Gets out an removes a loose board.
Then moves forwards an proceeds to damage the box containing the scrap, so it spills out
Vid then ends! (they should have showed all of it)
Where is his logic?
Should have been sacked immediately!
This guy couldnt tie his velcro sneakers.
Wow this was painful to watch
Where the fuck is his tilt?
That driver needs to be scrapped
I have no experience driving a fork lift and even I know he should go all the way in to begin with. Doomed fro. The first 5 seconds.
That place is a pigsty preventing access to and from the racking.
Made a complete Dogs Dinner of that...
aduyaiiii