John Deere Bulldozer Blade in San Jose - Our group offers a number of different replacement parts and accessories for many manufacturers of excavators, loaders, and bulldozers. We contain easy access to hundreds of businesses all over the globe and can supply all of your new and used equipment requirements.
These rugged forklifts are powered by Nissan industrial engines. Better horsepower and greater torque satisfy different warehouse, manufacturing and recycling operations as well as other outdoor/indoor situations.
The Nissan forklifts are offered in LP or liquid propane, or Dual Fuel with gas/LP. The fuel management system optimizes engine operation so as to provide superb fuel efficiency and less HC, CO and NOx exhaust emissions. Each and every compact model comes standard with the comprehensive engine protection system. This system is in place so as to warn operators in case of a severe drop in oil pressure or any excessive heat. This system provides extended drive train life and engine life for your lift truck investment.
Operator Control and Comfort
Designed with a spacious operator compartment, there is enough leg, foot and head room that could be set up for a range of different sized drivers. The forklift offers a standard full suspension seat which has soft touch arm pads and hip resistant to offer enhanced safety and maximum operator comfort. The unit's low profile design offers a lot of head clearance. Furthermore, there is a front to back travel adjustment to enable a customized fit so as to accommodate practically any operator height.
The K-series engine made by Nissan offers the same bottom by-pass colling system and block design which is standard on the predecessor H-series. These new and improved engines are specially tested and engineered for industrial use in order to provide all of the torque and power, in the low rpm range, to meet the needs of the operation.
An additional safety measure which is added for your investment, the K21engine has a transmission/engine warning system and protection in order to reduce the speed in case of excessive heat generation or low oil pressure.
The mobile crawler crane is particular crane designed with either a lattice boom or a telescopic boom. These move upon the crawlers tracks. Because this crane is self-propelled, it could move around certain work sites without the need for a lot of set up. Due to their enormous size and weight, crawler cranes are fairly costly and even hard to transport from one place to another. The crawler's tracks provide the equipment stability and allow the crane to function without the use of outriggers, although, there are several units which do use outriggers. In addition, the tracks provide the equipment's movement.
The first mobile cranes were originally mounted to train cars. They moved along short rail lines that were particularly built for the project. Once the 20th century arrived, the crawler tractor evolved and this brought the introduction of crawler tracks to the construction business as well as the agricultural industry. Not long after, excavators adopted the crawler tracks and this further showcased the machine's versatility. It was not long after before crane companies decided that the crawler track market was a safe bet.
In the 1920s, Northwest Engineering, a crane manufacturer within the USA, mounted its first crane on crawler tracks. It described the new machine as a "locomotive crane, independent of tracks and moveable under its own power." By the middle part of the 1920s, crawler tracks had become the chosen means of traction for heavy crane uses.