"I was licensed on this Class of Hyster (see below) for in-store pallet exhange and also to off-load 18 Wheelers coming in from the Distribution Centers." Karen A. Placek 7:23 AM 3/25/2016
This is a C.B. approach to the deep-Pocket shores of 7-11, Coors and Truck deliver Drivers on the Road NOW. An unattended Lift single driven Hyster Operator disregarded my concern of his key left in the Machine. I am a card carrying OSHA licensed by Steve Lewis at PetSmart Store #0053 in Sacramento, California in 1998. Still a key holder to the pocket on storage in safe as a Vault to ensure no copies can be locksmith`d to Shores of Society.
I asked the Driver of the Coors Truck about the key left in ON position as I had seen it the last time I was at 7-11 at the same time as he. I put my concern to reason, saying "Can that just drive-Off should a kid jump up on the stack 'cause he could kill someone.?". The driver laughed and answered "Yes" as he continued to giggle about my mentioning of the danger to kids.
Drawing breath I then said the above minus the noun of license to specific Trainer. The driver just began passing me off as he walked by the front of my car and answered, saying, "Well, it hasn't happened to me yet." The chuckling of funny in true form. I then said that to break the habit of leaving the key in the Hyster he should go into 7-11 and buy a keychain with a plastic coil to attach to the Hyster Key itself so that as he walked away he would be reminded to remove the key. The driver shrugged, laughed. The End.
Immediate Attention to ALL Key Holders of Hyster Machinery being used at Any & All PetSmart locations in the United States of America Foreign and domestic:
cc: Steve Lewis, Dave Brockway, Bill Lobell, Phil Francis, Bob Moran, Barbara Fitzgerald, Dave Vale, Henry Favro, Suresh Dedhia, Linda Fletcher go. . .as you were the Expert on S.A.P. I will Horn to the Truck Drivers of America and all the Coffee Shops as my Mother said always, "They have the best food in the World."
I cannot find the specific Hyster Lift. It was a single driver lift for easy on/off the back of a Delivery Truck with a gate.
Hyster Company ~ https://www.osha.gov/
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article relies largely or entirely upon a single source. (January 2016) |
Hyster is an American manufacturing company specializing in forklifts and other materials-handling equipment. Hyster was founded in 1929 as the Willamette-Ersted Company in Portland, Oregon.[1] The company was purchased in 1989 by NACCO Industries, Inc. and became a part of NACCO Materials Handling Group (NMHG). NACCO spun off the materials handling business in 2012 as Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc., which continues to market products under the Hyster brand name today.
The name "Hyster" allegedly derives from a term commonly used by logging workers in the Pacific Northwest at the end of the 19th century. When a load of lumber was ready to be transported, a logger would yell "Hoist 'er!". According to the Hyster Company web page,[1] this term became synonymous with Hyster trucks.
Distribution and support for Hyster products is organized around major world regions: North America and Canada; Latin America; Europe the Middle East & Africa; Asia – Pacific.
Hyster also manufactured a very successful line of compaction machinery and road rollers including machines for earth compaction, garbage compaction and asphalt compaction. Through the 1960s and 1970s Hyster was a major force in these types of machinery in America and they produced a wide range of models with many successful design concepts. Hyster was eventually absorbed into Bomag America/Compaction America (Now known as HYPAC) and some models including a small articulated rubber tire roller sold under the Hypac name is an original descendent of the Hyster machine.
Hyster also made a successful line of logging winches and compactor attachments, both of which could be attached to other manufactures machines including Caterpillar. Hyster Compactors. The Hyster name has been associated with forklift trucks for many decades, however, Hyster was also very prominent manufacturer of compaction equipment. From the 1950s through the 1980s they had a very comprehensive and well regarded line of products. Along with the Raygo company these two manufacturers were perhaps the best known in the USA, Up until European and other brands became common.
Hyster's Home office was Portland Oregon but they also had manufacturing plants in Danville, Peoria and Kewanee Illinois America. And The Netherlands, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Northern Ireland and South Africa. With a Specialist Engineering Department (SpED)in Irvine, Scotland.
MODELS Tandem Padfoot Drum Compactors
- C450A (1969 Range)
- C441A, C451B, C440A, C455B, C450B (1979 Range)
Tandem Smooth Drum Compactors
- C727A, C766A
Single Drum Compactors Smooth/Pad
- C610B, C612B, C615B, C617B, C625B, C627B (1979 Range)
- C850A, C852A, C860A (1985 Range)
Towed Compactors
- C200B, C210A (1979 Range)
Pneumatic Tyre Rollers
- C530A, C550A (1969 Range)
Steel Wheel Rollers
- C330A, C340A, C350B (1979 Range)
- C340B, C350C (1985 Range)
Grid Roller
- Various models
Big Trucks and Jumbo Trucks
Various Models
Various Models
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