US2702140A - Yoke for lift trucks and flexible pallet - Google Patents
Yoke for lift trucks and flexible pallet Download PDFInfo
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- US2702140A US2702140A US342211A US34221153A US2702140A US 2702140 A US2702140 A US 2702140A US 342211 A US342211 A US 342211A US 34221153 A US34221153 A US 34221153A US 2702140 A US2702140 A US 2702140A
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- yoke
- pallet
- arms
- support block
- bores
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- 238000010276 construction Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000015572 biosynthetic process Effects 0.000 description 2
- 239000004744 fabric Substances 0.000 description 2
- 230000000295 complement effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000007769 metal material Substances 0.000 description 1
- QVRVXSZKCXFBTE-UHFFFAOYSA-N n-[4-(6,7-dimethoxy-3,4-dihydro-1h-isoquinolin-2-yl)butyl]-2-(2-fluoroethoxy)-5-methylbenzamide Chemical compound C1C=2C=C(OC)C(OC)=CC=2CCN1CCCCNC(=O)C1=CC(C)=CC=C1OCCF QVRVXSZKCXFBTE-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 239000002023 wood Substances 0.000 description 1
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Classifications
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B66—HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
- B66F—HOISTING, 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
- B66F9/00—Devices for lifting or lowering bulky or heavy goods for loading or unloading purposes
- B66F9/06—Devices 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
- B66F9/075—Constructional features or details
- B66F9/12—Platforms; Forks; Other load supporting or gripping members
Definitions
- the conventional pallet has an undesirable characteristic, in that it acts as a limiting factor upon the number of objects which can be stacked upon a particular area of a warehouse floor.
- the present invention accordingly, is directed to a cooperating yoke and load support pallet, the pallet being formed as a web of burlap or like material and thus having no appreciable thickness when located in supporting relationship to stacked objects.
- the yoke in this regard, is adapted to be mounted upon a conventional lifting frame of a truck of the type stated, and can be substituted readily ,for the yoke already on said lifting frame.
- the yoke is so designed as to be particularly adapted to extend into loop-like ends formed upon the flexible pallet, dam to cooperate with the pallet in moving stacked o jects.
- Another object is to provide a lift truck yoke which will be adjustable as to the distance between the yoke or fork arms thereof.
- Another object is to provide, for coaction with the adjustable yoke. a flexible pallet which can be fashioned with minimum difficulty and expense.
- a further object is to provide a yoke as stated in which the fork arms can, if desired, be equipped with sheaths, which sheaths can be used to advantage in engaging flexible pallets ot' the type stated, to better facilitate rotation of the flexible pallet and thus enable all loads to rise level. These sheaths can be removed at the option of the user to allow the yoke arms to engage conventional pallets.
- Another object is to provide yoke arms which will be so designed as to engage flexible pallets at any height, including palletsdisposed directly against the floor surface.
- Figure l is a side elevational view of a lift truck equipped with a yoke formed in accordance with the present invention, the yoke being illustrated in operative association to a flexible pallet and an object supported on said pallet, the dotted line indicating the position of the yoke when it is to engage a pallet disposed against the floor surface;
- Figure 2 is an enlarged top plan view of the yoke and pallet, a portion of the pallet being broken away;
- Figure 3 is a front elevational view, on an enlarged scale, of the yoke and pallet.
- Figure 4 is a greatly enlarged detail sectional view taken substantially on line 44 of Figure 2.
- a lift truck 10 of conventional design has a lift frame 12 equipped with pulleys 14, 16, about which is trained a cable stretch 18.
- the yoke constituting the present invention include a base block 22 adapted to be bolted, welded, or otherwise fixedly connected to the conventional yoke mount of the lift frame 12.
- Base block 22 is flat, rectangular, and is provided, at the back surface thereof, with a clamping plate 24 of any desired outer configuration.
- Clamping plate 24 has clamping bolts 26 threaded thereinto. The clamping bolts 26 would also extend through the yoke mount of the lift truck, in this way the base block 22 is connected to said yoke mount and will be shiftable upwardly and downwardly uponthe lift frame 12 them with.
- Sup- .port block 28 is also rectangular, but is smaller in area than base block 22.
- the yoke also includes yoke arms 33, 34.
- the yoke arm 33 has an inner end portion 36 of straight formation, said inner end portion 36 being slidably extended within bore 30.
- the inner end portion 36' is complementary in cross sectional shape to said bore and thus is held against rotation within the bore.
- the tuner end portion 36 merges into a depending portion 38, said depending portion 38 being disposed at an obtuse angle to the inner end portion 36.
- the depending portion 38 at its lower end, merges into a forwardly projected outer end portion 40 of the yoke arm, said outer end portion being extended in a line normal to the line in which the inner end portion 36 is extended.
- the yoke arm 34 has an inner end portion 42 parallel to the inner end portion 36 of yoke arm 33.
- the portion 42 is slidably mounted in the lower bore 32 of the support block 28.
- portion 42 merges into a depending portion 44, said depending portion 44 being substantially shorter in length than the depending portion 38 of yoke arm 33.
- depending portion 44 merges into forwardly projected outer portion 46, the portion 46 being disposed in a plane common to the outer end portion 40 of yokearm 33, due to the abbreviated length of depending portion 44.
- the depending portions 38, 44 considered in their relationship to one another, diverge downwardly from the support block 28 as best shown in Figure 3.
- the portions 36,42 mounted in support block 28 are adjustable in the direction of their lengths, toward and away from the respective yoke arms.
- the inner end portion 36 of yoke arm 33 is adjustable toward and away from the yoke 34, while the portion 42 is adjustable toward and away from yoke arm 33.
- the forwardly projected outer end portions 40, 46 are adjusted as to the distance therebetween.
- Set screws 47 threadable into the top and bottom surfaces, respectively, of the support block 28, engage the inner end portions 36, 42 in their selected positions of adjustment, to prevent movement of these portions of the yoke arms from said adjusted positions.
- outer end portion 40 Adjacent the juncture of outer end portion 40 with depending portion 38, said outer end portion is, as shown in Figure 4, formed with threads 48. Engaging said threads are internal threads formed upon an open ended adaptor sleeve 50. Adaptor sleeve 50 has external threads engaged by internal threads formed upon a nut 52.
- an internally directed circumferential flange 54 is formed, engageable with a collar or shoulder 56 formed u on the inner end of a tubular sheath 58 adapted to be tted over outer end portion 40.
- Sheath 58 at its outer end, is formed with a rounded end wall, to facilitate extension of the sheath into the looplike end edges of flexible pallets 60.
- outer end portion 46 is equipped with an adaptor sleeve and nut like those of portion 40, and 'is also provided with a removable sheath 58.
- the flexible pallet has loop-like ends 62 into which sheaths 58 are extendable.
- Objects to be lifted have been designated by'the reference numeral 64.
- said ob ects can be stacked vertically, with pallets 60 being located at selected points along the length of the stack.
- the pallets' have their loop-like end edges 62 disposed beyond the sides of the stack, to facilitate extension of the outer end portions of the yoke arms thereinto.
- the yoke In use of the yoke, onemerely locates the yoke arms at a selected elevation, after which the truck 10 1S driven toward the stack. The sheathed yoke arms are thus extended into the loop-like end edges 62 of the flexible allets. p Thereafter, the yoke is lifted, thus causing the object 64 supported upon the engaged pallet to be lifted there-- w'th 'Ihe pallet has the desirable characteristic of having no appreciable thickness, and thus does not take up space which could and should be taken up by the stacked objects. This is important in warehouse operations, in which a continual effort is being made to devise more efficient ways of storing objects.
- the pallet also has the desirable characteristic of l fting This is accomplished by the fact that the pallet, an endless webbing, will revolve on the sheaths until the distance from edge of load to sheath is equal on both sides of load.
- the .yoke arms can be used in a regular manner, for engaging conventional allets. j p It is believed apparent that the invention is not necessarily confined to the specific use or uses thereof described above, since it may be utilized for any purpose to whichit may be suited. Nor is the invention to be necessarily limited to the specific construction illustrated and described, since such construction is only intended to be illustrative of the principles of operation and the means presently devised to carry out said principles, it being considered that the invention comprehends any minor change in construction that may be permitted within the scope of the appended claims.
- a load support yoke for lift trucks comprising: a flat base block including on one face thereof means to clamp the same fixedly and separably to a lift truck yoke mount; a flat support blockfixed to the opposite face of the base block and having vertically spaced, parallel, horizontally extending bores of non-circular cross section opening at their ends upon the respective ends of the support block; a pair of yoke arms including straight, horizontal inner portions having a cross section complementing that of the bores and mounted within the bores for free sliding movement in the direction of their lengths responsive to manual adjustment by a user, depending portions integral with one end of the respective inner end portions, said depending portions being of different lengths with their lower ends terminating in a common horizontal plane, and load-engaging outer end portions integral with said lower ends of the depending portions 5 lengths responsive to manual adjustment by a user, de-
- a load support yoke for lift trucks comprising: a hat, vertically disposed base block having mounted on one face thereof a clamping plate shiftable toward and away from said one face to engage, between said plate and base block, a portion of a lift truck yoke mount, thereby to fixedly and detachably demount the base block upon said yoke mount; a solidly constituted, vertically disposed support block fixedly mounted upon the opposite face of the base block and formed with vertically spaced, parallel, horizontally extending bores of non-circular cross section opening at their ends upon the respective ends of the 4 support block; a pail-"of yoke arms including straight, horizontal inner end portions having a cross section complementing that of the bores, and mounted within the bores for free sliding movement inthe direction of their pending portions integral with one end of the respective inner end portions, said depending portions being of different lengths with their lower ends terminatingjn a common horizontal plane, and load-engaging outer end portions integral with said lower ends of the depending portions and
- a combination yoke and pallet structure comprising a support
- a combination yoke and pallet structure comprising a support block; means to mount said support block upon theyoke mount of an industrial lift truck, said support block having vertically spaced, Parallel, horizontally extending bores opening upon the opposite ends of the support block; yoke arm mounted in the bores of the support block, said yoke arms being mounted in said bores for free sliding movement, to adjust the yoke arm toward and away from one another responsive to manual shifting of the same by a user, said yoke arms having, at those ends thereof remote from the support block, coplanar, horizontally disposed end portions; and a flexible pallet formed as an endless length of fabric into which said arms are extendable, the end portions of said arms projecting into said pallet and having smooth surfaces for free rotational movement of the pallet about'said end portions under/the weight of a supported object, thus to center said object in level position between the arms, said yoke arms additionally including elongated sleeves of circular cross section mounted upon said end portions of
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
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- Civil Engineering (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Geology (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Pallets (AREA)
Description
Feb. 15, 1955 J. B. MOMYER 2,702,140
YOKE FOR LIFT raucxs AND FLEXIBLE PALLET Filed March 1:5, 195:
. VIIIIIIIIIIl/lllllll' iM ENTOR.
JOE 5. MOM r52 BY YOKE FOR LIFT TRUCKS AND FLEXIBLE PALLET Joe 1L Momyer, Scottdale, Pa. Application March 13, 1953, Serial No. 342,211
4 Claims. (CL 214-731) Most usually, a pallet isof rigid formation, being constructed from either wood or metal material. A pallet so formed necessarily has an appreciable thickness, the
thickness of each pallet in the stack accounting for an appreciable part of the height of the stack.
It will be seen, accordingly, that the conventional pallet has an undesirable characteristic, in that it acts as a limiting factor upon the number of objects which can be stacked upon a particular area of a warehouse floor.
The present invention, accordingly, is directed to a cooperating yoke and load support pallet, the pallet being formed as a web of burlap or like material and thus having no appreciable thickness when located in supporting relationship to stacked objects. The yoke, in this regard, is adapted to be mounted upon a conventional lifting frame of a truck of the type stated, and can be substituted readily ,for the yoke already on said lifting frame. The yoke is so designed as to be particularly adapted to extend into loop-like ends formed upon the flexible pallet, dam to cooperate with the pallet in moving stacked o jects.
Another object is to provide a lift truck yoke which will be adjustable as to the distance between the yoke or fork arms thereof.
Another object is to provide, for coaction with the adjustable yoke. a flexible pallet which can be fashioned with minimum difficulty and expense.
A further object is to provide a yoke as stated in which the fork arms can, if desired, be equipped with sheaths, which sheaths can be used to advantage in engaging flexible pallets ot' the type stated, to better facilitate rotation of the flexible pallet and thus enable all loads to rise level. These sheaths can be removed at the option of the user to allow the yoke arms to engage conventional pallets.
Another object is to provide yoke arms which will be so designed as to engage flexible pallets at any height, including palletsdisposed directly against the floor surface.
Other objects will appear from the following description, the claims appended thereto, and from the annexed drawing, in which like reference characters designate like parts throughout the several views, and whereini Figure l is a side elevational view of a lift truck equipped with a yoke formed in accordance with the present invention, the yoke being illustrated in operative association to a flexible pallet and an object supported on said pallet, the dotted line indicating the position of the yoke when it is to engage a pallet disposed against the floor surface;
Figure 2 is an enlarged top plan view of the yoke and pallet, a portion of the pallet being broken away;
Figure 3 is a front elevational view, on an enlarged scale, of the yoke and pallet; and
Figure 4 is a greatly enlarged detail sectional view taken substantially on line 44 of Figure 2.
A lift truck 10 of conventional design has a lift frame 12 equipped with pulleys 14, 16, about which is trained a cable stretch 18.
These parts are conventional per se.
United States Patent The yoke constituting the present invention inclu a base block 22 adapted to be bolted, welded, or otherwise fixedly connected to the conventional yoke mount of the lift frame 12. Base block 22 is flat, rectangular, and is provided, at the back surface thereof, with a clamping plate 24 of any desired outer configuration. Clamping plate 24 has clamping bolts 26 threaded thereinto. The clamping bolts 26 would also extend through the yoke mount of the lift truck, in this way the base block 22 is connected to said yoke mount and will be shiftable upwardly and downwardly uponthe lift frame 12 them with.
Welded or otherwise fixedly connected to the front surface of thebase block 22 is a support block 28. Sup- .port block 28 is also rectangular, but is smaller in area than base block 22. I
In the support block 28 I form longitudinal bores 30,
These are o rectangular cross section, and areextended in parallel relation, the bores opening upon the opposite ends of the support block.
The yoke also includes yoke arms 33, 34. The yoke arm 33 has an inner end portion 36 of straight formation, said inner end portion 36 being slidably extended within bore 30. The inner end portion 36'is complementary in cross sectional shape to said bore and thus is held against rotation within the bore.
At its inner end, the tuner end portion 36 merges into a depending portion 38, said depending portion 38 being disposed at an obtuse angle to the inner end portion 36.
The depending portion 38, at its lower end, merges into a forwardly projected outer end portion 40 of the yoke arm, said outer end portion being extended in a line normal to the line in which the inner end portion 36 is extended. a
The yoke arm 34 has an inner end portion 42 parallel to the inner end portion 36 of yoke arm 33. The portion 42 is slidably mounted in the lower bore 32 of the support block 28. At its inner end, portion 42 merges into a depending portion 44, said depending portion 44 being substantially shorter in length than the depending portion 38 of yoke arm 33. At its lower end, depending portion 44 merges into forwardly projected outer portion 46, the portion 46 being disposed in a plane common to the outer end portion 40 of yokearm 33, due to the abbreviated length of depending portion 44. The depending portions 38, 44, considered in their relationship to one another, diverge downwardly from the support block 28 as best shown in Figure 3.
The portions 36,42 mounted in support block 28 are adjustable in the direction of their lengths, toward and away from the respective yoke arms. In other words, the inner end portion 36 of yoke arm 33 is adjustable toward and away from the yoke 34, while the portion 42 is adjustable toward and away from yoke arm 33. By reason of this arrangement, the forwardly projected outer end portions 40, 46 are adjusted as to the distance therebetween.
Set screws 47, threadable into the top and bottom surfaces, respectively, of the support block 28, engage the inner end portions 36, 42 in their selected positions of adjustment, to prevent movement of these portions of the yoke arms from said adjusted positions.
Adjacent the juncture of outer end portion 40 with depending portion 38, said outer end portion is, as shown in Figure 4, formed with threads 48. Engaging said threads are internal threads formed upon an open ended adaptor sleeve 50. Adaptor sleeve 50 has external threads engaged by internal threads formed upon a nut 52.
At one end of nut 52, an internally directed circumferential flange 54 is formed, engageable with a collar or shoulder 56 formed u on the inner end of a tubular sheath 58 adapted to be tted over outer end portion 40. Sheath 58, at its outer end, is formed with a rounded end wall, to facilitate extension of the sheath into the looplike end edges of flexible pallets 60.
It will be understood that the outer end portion 46 is equipped with an adaptor sleeve and nut like those of portion 40, and 'is also provided with a removable sheath 58.
The flexible pallet has loop-like ends 62 into which sheaths 58 are extendable.
" Patented Feb. 15, 1955 loads level.
Objects to be lifted have been designated by'the reference numeral 64. As shown in Figure 1, said ob ects can be stacked vertically, with pallets 60 being located at selected points along the length of the stack. The pallets'have their loop-like end edges 62 disposed beyond the sides of the stack, to facilitate extension of the outer end portions of the yoke arms thereinto.
In use of the yoke, onemerely locates the yoke arms at a selected elevation, after which the truck 10 1S driven toward the stack. The sheathed yoke arms are thus extended into the loop-like end edges 62 of the flexible allets. p Thereafter, the yoke is lifted, thus causing the object 64 supported upon the engaged pallet to be lifted there-- w'th 'Ihe pallet has the desirable characteristic of having no appreciable thickness, and thus does not take up space which could and should be taken up by the stacked objects. This is important in warehouse operations, in which a continual effort is being made to devise more efficient ways of storing objects.
The pallet also has the desirable characteristic of l fting This is accomplished by the fact that the pallet, an endless webbing, will revolve on the sheaths until the distance from edge of load to sheath is equal on both sides of load.
When the sheaths 58 are removed, the .yoke arms can be used in a regular manner, for engaging conventional allets. j p It is believed apparent that the invention is not necessarily confined to the specific use or uses thereof described above, since it may be utilized for any purpose to whichit may be suited. Nor is the invention to be necessarily limited to the specific construction illustrated and described, since such construction is only intended to be illustrative of the principles of operation and the means presently devised to carry out said principles, it being considered that the invention comprehends any minor change in construction that may be permitted within the scope of the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
l. A load support yoke for lift trucks and comprising: a flat base block including on one face thereof means to clamp the same fixedly and separably to a lift truck yoke mount; a flat support blockfixed to the opposite face of the base block and having vertically spaced, parallel, horizontally extending bores of non-circular cross section opening at their ends upon the respective ends of the support block; a pair of yoke arms including straight, horizontal inner portions having a cross section complementing that of the bores and mounted within the bores for free sliding movement in the direction of their lengths responsive to manual adjustment by a user, depending portions integral with one end of the respective inner end portions, said depending portions being of different lengths with their lower ends terminating in a common horizontal plane, and load-engaging outer end portions integral with said lower ends of the depending portions 5 lengths responsive to manual adjustment by a user, de-
and extending horizontally therefrom; and means threadable Within the support block into said bores to retain the inner end portions in selected positions of slidable adjustment.
2. A load support yoke for lift trucks comprising: a hat, vertically disposed base block having mounted on one face thereof a clamping plate shiftable toward and away from said one face to engage, between said plate and base block, a portion of a lift truck yoke mount, thereby to fixedly and detachably demount the base block upon said yoke mount; a solidly constituted, vertically disposed support block fixedly mounted upon the opposite face of the base block and formed with vertically spaced, parallel, horizontally extending bores of non-circular cross section opening at their ends upon the respective ends of the 4 support block; a pail-"of yoke arms including straight, horizontal inner end portions having a cross section complementing that of the bores, and mounted within the bores for free sliding movement inthe direction of their pending portions integral with one end of the respective inner end portions, said depending portions being of different lengths with their lower ends terminatingjn a common horizontal plane, and load-engaging outer end portions integral with said lower ends of the depending portions and extending horizontally therefrom; and means threadable within the support block into said bores to retain the inner end portions in selected positions of slidable adjustment.
3. In a lift-truck-mounted load'support device, a combination yoke and pallet structure comprising a support,
block; means to mount said support block upon the yoke mount of an industrial lift truck, said support block having vertically spaced, parallel, horizontally extending boresopening upon the opposite ends of the support block; yoke arms mounted in the bores of the support block, said yoke arms being mounted in said bores for free sliding movement, to adjust the yoke arms toward and away from one another responsive to manual shifting of the same by a user, said yoke arms having, at those ends thereof remote from the support block, coplanar, horizontally disposed end portions; and a flexible pallet formed as an endless length of fabric into which said arms are extendable, the end portions of said arms projecting into said pallet and having smooth surfaces for free rotational movement of the pallet about said end portions under the weight of a supported object, thus to center said object in level position between the arms.
4. In a lift-truck-mounted load support device, a combination yoke and pallet structure comprising a support block; means to mount said support block upon theyoke mount of an industrial lift truck, said support block having vertically spaced, Parallel, horizontally extending bores opening upon the opposite ends of the support block; yoke arm mounted in the bores of the support block, said yoke arms being mounted in said bores for free sliding movement, to adjust the yoke arm toward and away from one another responsive to manual shifting of the same by a user, said yoke arms having, at those ends thereof remote from the support block, coplanar, horizontally disposed end portions; and a flexible pallet formed as an endless length of fabric into which said arms are extendable, the end portions of said arms projecting into said pallet and having smooth surfaces for free rotational movement of the pallet about'said end portions under/the weight of a supported object, thus to center said object in level position between the arms, said yoke arms additionally including elongated sleeves of circular cross section mounted upon said end portions of the yoke arm for free rotational movement independently of one another, the yoke arms including means holding said sleeves detachably assembled with their associated yoke arm end portions.
References Cited in the m. of this patent
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US342211A US2702140A (en) | 1953-03-13 | 1953-03-13 | Yoke for lift trucks and flexible pallet |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US342211A US2702140A (en) | 1953-03-13 | 1953-03-13 | Yoke for lift trucks and flexible pallet |
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US2702140A true US2702140A (en) | 1955-02-15 |
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US342211A Expired - Lifetime US2702140A (en) | 1953-03-13 | 1953-03-13 | Yoke for lift trucks and flexible pallet |
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Cited By (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2775359A (en) * | 1955-07-22 | 1956-12-25 | Russell J Carpenter | Paper roll handling attachment for industrial elevating trucks |
US2817792A (en) * | 1956-01-11 | 1957-12-24 | Production Plastics Corp | Material handling apparatus |
US2960244A (en) * | 1956-12-06 | 1960-11-15 | American Cyanamid Co | Transportation unit and lifting sling therefor |
US3022906A (en) * | 1958-01-02 | 1962-02-27 | Anchor Hocking Glass Corp | Method and mechanism for handling articles |
US3083879A (en) * | 1958-03-24 | 1963-04-02 | Clarence B Coleman | Dispensing bin |
US3229836A (en) * | 1964-08-07 | 1966-01-18 | California Portland Cement Co | Cement sack pallet and handling equipment |
US3504641A (en) * | 1968-07-10 | 1970-04-07 | Unarco Industries | Lading panels with tine receiving elements |
US3749263A (en) * | 1970-07-02 | 1973-07-31 | Automatisme Cie Gle | Method for transferring a load from a first support to a second support |
US3799378A (en) * | 1972-04-05 | 1974-03-26 | D Kampe | Method for harvesting baled crops |
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US1277084A (en) * | 1917-05-05 | 1918-08-27 | Fred A Keith | Stretcher. |
US1382610A (en) * | 1919-12-13 | 1921-06-21 | Union Machinery Company | Bucket for proofing apparatus |
US1835431A (en) * | 1928-07-03 | 1931-12-08 | Peter E Ryerson | Pipe handling machine |
US1923617A (en) * | 1932-09-07 | 1933-08-22 | Alice S Edensword | Invalid's chair |
US2036359A (en) * | 1935-01-31 | 1936-04-07 | George H Pride | Method and apparatus for handling materials |
US2490772A (en) * | 1945-08-20 | 1949-12-13 | William J Benner | Convertible truck |
US2561896A (en) * | 1949-02-19 | 1951-07-24 | Weiss Samuel | Industrial truck attachment |
US2571550A (en) * | 1948-06-11 | 1951-10-16 | Hyster Co | Material handling device for industrial trucks |
US2575552A (en) * | 1949-04-05 | 1951-11-20 | Jr William S Glenn | Tiltable platform for industrial trucks |
US2601933A (en) * | 1949-07-12 | 1952-07-01 | Lucian E Seagraves | Freight handling truck or machine |
US2640583A (en) * | 1951-01-11 | 1953-06-02 | J H Day Company Inc | Proofer tray |
-
1953
- 1953-03-13 US US342211A patent/US2702140A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (11)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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US1277084A (en) * | 1917-05-05 | 1918-08-27 | Fred A Keith | Stretcher. |
US1382610A (en) * | 1919-12-13 | 1921-06-21 | Union Machinery Company | Bucket for proofing apparatus |
US1835431A (en) * | 1928-07-03 | 1931-12-08 | Peter E Ryerson | Pipe handling machine |
US1923617A (en) * | 1932-09-07 | 1933-08-22 | Alice S Edensword | Invalid's chair |
US2036359A (en) * | 1935-01-31 | 1936-04-07 | George H Pride | Method and apparatus for handling materials |
US2490772A (en) * | 1945-08-20 | 1949-12-13 | William J Benner | Convertible truck |
US2571550A (en) * | 1948-06-11 | 1951-10-16 | Hyster Co | Material handling device for industrial trucks |
US2561896A (en) * | 1949-02-19 | 1951-07-24 | Weiss Samuel | Industrial truck attachment |
US2575552A (en) * | 1949-04-05 | 1951-11-20 | Jr William S Glenn | Tiltable platform for industrial trucks |
US2601933A (en) * | 1949-07-12 | 1952-07-01 | Lucian E Seagraves | Freight handling truck or machine |
US2640583A (en) * | 1951-01-11 | 1953-06-02 | J H Day Company Inc | Proofer tray |
Cited By (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2775359A (en) * | 1955-07-22 | 1956-12-25 | Russell J Carpenter | Paper roll handling attachment for industrial elevating trucks |
US2817792A (en) * | 1956-01-11 | 1957-12-24 | Production Plastics Corp | Material handling apparatus |
US2960244A (en) * | 1956-12-06 | 1960-11-15 | American Cyanamid Co | Transportation unit and lifting sling therefor |
US3022906A (en) * | 1958-01-02 | 1962-02-27 | Anchor Hocking Glass Corp | Method and mechanism for handling articles |
US3083879A (en) * | 1958-03-24 | 1963-04-02 | Clarence B Coleman | Dispensing bin |
US3229836A (en) * | 1964-08-07 | 1966-01-18 | California Portland Cement Co | Cement sack pallet and handling equipment |
US3504641A (en) * | 1968-07-10 | 1970-04-07 | Unarco Industries | Lading panels with tine receiving elements |
US3749263A (en) * | 1970-07-02 | 1973-07-31 | Automatisme Cie Gle | Method for transferring a load from a first support to a second support |
US3799378A (en) * | 1972-04-05 | 1974-03-26 | D Kampe | Method for harvesting baled crops |
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