WHEN IT COMES TO COLD STORAGE, EVERY INCH
is precious real estate. Unlike dry storage facilities, contract
warehousing companies that handle frozen and refrigerated
goods have to factor in the enormous cost of maintaining
chilly temperatures in vast spaces. The more products they
can squeeze in, the better.
One such company is Molloy &
Sherry, a third-party warehouse specialist in Ireland that provides cold storage
and transportation services for food-in-dustry customers. The company operates three facilities in the Dublin area,
including a 200,000-square-foot warehouse in the town of Swords. The operations include 11,000 cold storage pallet
positions, 3,000 refrigerated positions,
and 500 dry positions.
A few years back, the company
launched an effort to maximize storage
space within a key 50,000-square-foot
frozen area, where it stores products
like chicken, butter, and frozen bread
for customers. To boost storage density,
managers chose narrow-aisle racking for
this freezer space, where temperatures bottom out at minus
22 degrees Celsius (minus 8 degrees Fahrenheit).
The move to narrow-aisle racking resulted in an immediate increase in storage slots. “We gained over 500 storage
positions with the narrow aisles,” reports Patrick Boyd,
facilities manager. He says this allowed the addition of one
full aisle in that portion of the building.
ARTICULATED WELL
The move to narrow-aisle racking also had implications
for the forklifts that would be used in the freezer area. The
narrow aisles measure only 2. 1 meters wide ( 6. 9 feet), compared with widths of at least three meters ( 9. 8 feet) in the
conventional rack areas. And because the pallets hang over
the rack edges by several inches on each side, the actual
navigable space between the racks is even narrower. That
meant Molloy & Sherry needed forklifts capable of working
in aisles that were only about six feet wide.
After weighing its options, the company chose the Aisle-Master articulated forklift, which is manufactured by
Ireland-based Combilift. The Aisle-Master’s design makes
it well suited for use in narrow spaces. The truck’s forks
rest upon an articulated swivel and a separate set of wheels,
which allows the front portion of the vehicle, including the
forks, to easily pivot left and right independently of the rest of the truck. The
Aisle-Master truck drives into an aisle
the same way a conventional reach truck
does and then swivels its forks to face
rack positions at the optimal angle for
putaway and retrieval. Setting the forks
at an angle also provides better visibility
for drivers, resulting in safer handling.
The trucks used in Molloy & Sherry’s
operation are designed to provide safe,
stable lifting of loads weighing 1,250
kilograms ( 2,756 pounds) to a height of
8. 4 meters ( 27. 6 feet). The Aisle-Master
also comes in models that can operate in
aisles as narrow as 1. 6 meters ( 5. 2 feet)
and can lift loads up to 15 meters high
( 49. 2 feet).
Boyd says that his forklift operators were initially reluc-
tant to drive a truck that was so radically different from
what they were used to. But they soon discovered that put-
away and retrieval tasks went faster with the Aisle-Master
articulated trucks than with conventional forklifts. “Once
they got on them, they realized it was easier to maneuver
the pallets,” he says. “We were delighted to hear that from
our drivers, who now say they would not want to go back
to their old trucks.”
On top of that, the trucks have proved to be highly
dependable. Boyd reports that Molloy & Sherry has been
using Aisle-Master trucks since 2013 and has not had to do
any repairs beyond normal maintenance.
All in all, the decision to go with the Combilift trucks
“was a no-brainer,” according to Boyd. “We covered the
cost in nearly the first year [with space savings],” he says.
“The Aisle-Masters are very, very reliable and dependable.
They allow us to keep these lads working.”
Faced with a space crunch, Irish cold storage provider Molloy & Sherry moved to narrow-aisle
storage and Aisle-Master articulated forklifts, with cool results.
A well-articulated solution