MMH    Topics     Blogs

Handling & warehouse ergonomics: A cart is just a cart, right?


Wickliffe, Ohio—“Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.”

That famous phrase may or may not have been uttered by Sigmund Freud. Regardless of the author, over the years it’s come to mean that how a thing is used can have multiple interpretations. Or not.

So what does Freud have to do with materials handling you might wonder? Fair question. One of the things I’ve always found fascinating about the materials handling industry is how seemingly ordinary things can enable extraordinary gains in productivity.

I was reminded of this last week when I was writing an August feature on the technological advances in lift trucks, which today are every bit as sophisticated as a fully-loaded Benz. And, it was further reinforced the other day when I visited with Larry Tyler, a co-founder of Kinetic Technologies in Wickliffe, Ohio.

K-Tec makes carts that are used mostly by manufacturers to move product around a plant, although the company’s carts are used by some distributors as well. Now, you would think that a cart is just a cart, right? How complicated can a platform with wheels be?

While he knows better now, Tyler said that’s what he thought when he and his partner founded the company about 11 years ago. Tyler is an engineer and his partner had a fraternity brother who worked at GM. They were invited into a meeting, and after being presented with a materials handling problem, they assured the auto exec that they could build a cart to solve the problem. How hard could it be?

“Then we started engineering the thing and asked ourselves, how are we going to build it?” Tyler said.

You can probably guess the end of this story: a plucky upstart gets an order to build a prototype and the rest is history. From that experience, Tyler told me, he learned a couple of things. One is that manufacturers – first the automotive guys and now other manufacturers – are looking at carts or carts and tuggers as enablers of fork-free environments in lean applications. The second is that when you can custom-engineer a cart to integrate with other materials handling and manufacturing systems, the cart becomes a cog in the efficient flow of materials from the receiving dock to the finished goods warehouse.

As such, K-Tec does have a line of stock carts that are just carts – steel platforms with wheels that are sold in industrial catalogs and on Amazon. But most of the company’s output has been custom-designed with everything from conveyor beds to carts that interface with robotic work cells and about everything in between. “We have engineered over 300 unique designs,” Tyler said as he walked me through the work area in his plant. And, from a start in automotive, today the company is custom-designing carts that are used to move mattresses in a warehouse and huge commercial air conditioning units. “If you can move it with a cart, we’ve probably been asked to design it.”


Article Topics

Blogs
Carts
Ergonomics
Kinetic Technologies
   All topics

Blogs News & Resources

Automate 2024 heavy on smart warehouse robotics
Vehicle-mounted computers: Beyond rugged
New packaging idea for the cold chain
Learn from lift truck service history
Two voices of reason on pallet materials
60 Seconds with Bob Trebilcock, outgoing executive editor, Modern Materials Handling
The reBound Podcast: How Pitney-Bowes is innovating with autonomous vehicles.
More Blogs

Latest in Materials Handling

ISM May Semiannual Report signals growth in 2024, at a reduced rate
11th annual National Forklift Safety Day to be hybrid event, on June 11
PAC Machinery announces leadership transition
Motion Industries to acquire automation company
Automate 2024 heavy on smart warehouse robotics
Lift Trucks & Accesories: The Trusted Workhorse Evolves
Automate & Accelerate: Replacing Pick-to-Light with the Next Generation of Automation
More Materials Handling

About the Author

Bob Trebilcock's avatar
Bob Trebilcock
Bob Trebilcock is the executive editor for Modern Materials Handling and an editorial advisor to Supply Chain Management Review. He has covered materials handling, technology, logistics, and supply chain topics for nearly 30 years. He is a graduate of Bowling Green State University. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at 603-852-8976.
Follow Modern Materials Handling on FaceBook

Subscribe to Materials Handling Magazine

Subscribe today!
Not a subscriber? Sign up today!
Subscribe today. It's FREE.
Find out what the world's most innovative companies are doing to improve productivity in their plants and distribution centers.
Start your FREE subscription today.

May 2024 Modern Materials Handling

A complete modernization of the sortation and conveyance at Boscov’s DC, along with updated software and a new order processing area, have transformed the ability of the department store chain’s DC to move more cartons in less time, while permitting more frequent replenishment shipment for stores.

Latest Resources

2023 Automation Study: Usage & Implementation of Warehouse/DC Automation Solutions
2023 Automation Study: Usage & Implementation of Warehouse/DC Automation Solutions
This research was conducted by Peerless Research Group on behalf of Modern Materials Handling to assess usage and purchase intentions forautomation systems...
How Your Storage Practices Can Affect Your Pest Control Program
How Your Storage Practices Can Affect Your Pest Control Program
Discover how your storage practices could be affecting your pest control program and how to prevent pest infestations in your business. Join...

Warehousing Outlook 2023
Warehousing Outlook 2023
2023 is here, and so are new warehousing trends.
Extend the Life of Brownfield Warehouses
Extend the Life of Brownfield Warehouses
Today’s robotic and data-driven automation systems can minimize disruptions and improve the life and productivity of warehouse operations.
Power Supply in Overhead Cranes: Energy Chains vs. Festoons
Power Supply in Overhead Cranes: Energy Chains vs. Festoons
Download this white paper to learn more about how both systems compare.