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Material Handling Attachments | Forge Claw
Material handling attachments do the heavy sorting, lifting, gripping, and hauling that turns one machine into a full crew. Pallet forks on a telehandler. A grapple on a skid steer tearing through demolition debris. A lifting beam off a crane jib placing steel beams three stories up. One base machine, half a dozen attachments, and you've replaced a fleet. That's how contractors cut equipment costs without cutting output. Every attachment here is built for operators who need real capacity ratings, real hydraulic compatibility, and gear that performs shift after shift on demanding job sites. Equipment financing available for qualified buyers.
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Forklift Attachment for Powered Hand Trucks | 309 lb Capacity | 6 ft Lift Height | Makinex
Overview Transform your warehouse operations with the Forklift Attachment for powered hand trucks, designed to give a single operator the power to...
View full detailsPowered Hand Truck for Material Handling | 309 lb Capacity | 6'2" Lift Height | Battery Powered | Makinex
Overview The Makinex Powered Hand Truck w/Hook eliminates the back-breaking work of lifting heavy equipment and materials on job sites. This batte...
View full detailsGenerator for Job Site | 32kW | Honda Engine | 480V | Dual Phase | Makinex
Overview When your job site demands serious portable power without the bulk of traditional generators, the Generator 32kW | Honda | 480V USA-Spec ...
View full detailsMakinex Portable Generator for Job Site | 16kW | Honda GX690 | 240V USA-Spec | Dual Phase | Makinex
Overview When you need reliable portable power for demanding job site applications, the Generator for Job Site | 16kW | Honda GX690 | 240V USA-Spec...
View full detailsElectric Track Carrier for Multi-Terrain | 48" Wide | 5,300 lb Capacity | Zero Emission | Movex
Overview When you need to transport heavy materials across terrain that stops other equipment cold, the Movex All Terrain Track Carrier delivers t...
View full detailsStair Climbing Crane for Material Handling | 30-In Wide | 2,090 Lb Capacity | Movex
Overview The Movex TT-270 Stair Climbing Crane delivers something you've never seen before: a full-capacity telescopic crane that actually climbs ...
View full detailsAll Terrain Track Carrier for Material Handling | 30-In. Wide | 8,000-Lb. Capacity | Electric Powered | Movex
Overview The All Terrain Track Carrier XC-30 delivers serious lifting power in a compact package that fits through standard doors and gates. At ju...
View full details9-Gallon Gas Powered Air Compressor | Wheelbarrow Style | 20.6 CFM @ 90 PSI | Honda GX270 Engine | Industrial Air
Overview When your job demands reliable portable air power, the Industrial Air 9-Gallon Wheelbarrow Style Air Compressor delivers the performance ...
View full details8-Gallon Gas Air Compressor | Wheelbarrow Style | 9.9 CFM @ 90 PSI | Honda GX160 Engine | Industrial Air
Overview The Industrial Air 8-Gallon Air Compressor delivers professional-grade performance in a mobile, wheelbarrow-style design that's built for...
View full details30-Gallon Truck Mount Air Compressor | 24CFM | Honda GX390 | Electric Start | Industrial Air
Overview The Industrial Air 30-Gallon Air Compressor delivers serious power for service trucks, mobile operations, and field work where reliabilit...
View full detailsQuiet Air Compressor | Silent Operation | 3.24 CFM @ 90 PSI | 1.5 HP | 5 Gallon Tank | Hulk
Overview When your work demands precision and quiet operation, the Hulk Air Compressor delivers professional-grade performance without the noise t...
View full details12 x 18 Orbital Polisher for Floor Finishing | Professional Grade | Sealed Baldor Motor | Essex
Overview The Essex-Silver Line Orbital Polisher with its 12 x 18 working platform delivers professional-grade floor finishing performance for cont...
View full detailsPortable Radiant Heater for Construction Equipment | 12K BTU | Propane | Cordless | 1,700 sq ft | DEWALT
Overview When you need reliable heat that goes wherever your work takes you, the DEWALT DXH12B Portable Radiant Heater delivers powerful performan...
View full details8-Gallon Air Compressor for Construction Sites | Honda GX160 Engine | 9.9 CFM at 90 PSI | Wheelbarrow Style | DEWALT
Overview The 8-Gallon Air Compressor with Honda GX160 engine delivers the reliable compressed air power that busy contractors need on demanding jo...
View full details8-Gallon Air Compressor for Construction Equipment | Wheelbarrow Style | 5.7 CFM @ 90 PSI | 1.9 HP Motor | DEWALT
Overview When your construction projects demand reliable compressed air power, this 8-gallon air compressor delivers professional performance with...
View full details4-Gallon Gas Pontoon Air Compressor for Job Sites | 5.0 CFM @ 90 PSI | Honda GX160 Engine | DEWALT
Overview When your work demands reliable compressed air power that goes wherever the job takes you, this 4-gallon pontoon-style air compressor del...
View full details5 HP Electric Motor for Air Compressor | Single-Phase | 208-230V | 3450 RPM | 7/8-In. Keyed Shaft | Castair
Overview When your air compressor goes down, you need a replacement motor that delivers reliable performance without the hassle of hunting for com...
View full details80 Gal. Vertical Air Compressor Tank for Industrial Compressors | ASME Compliant | 200 PSI | Steel Construction | Castair
Overview Building a custom air compressor system that delivers consistent, high-pressure performance requires starting with the right foundation. ...
View full details30 Gal 3-in-1 Compressor Generator Welder Combo for Construction Equipment | Honda GX390 | 19.7 CFM | 5000W | Castair
Overview When your job site demands compressed air, reliable power, and professional welding capabilities all in one location, the 30 Gal 3-in-1 C...
View full details20 Gallon Vertical Air Compressor | 2HP Single Phase | Cast Iron Pump | Belt Driven | Castair
Overview The CASTAIR Garage Series 20-gallon vertical air compressor delivers professional-grade performance to workshops, garages, and job sites ...
View full details80 Gal. Vertical Air Compressor | 5HP 1-Phase | 18.1 CFM @100 PSI | Two-Stage Cast Iron Pump | Castair
Overview The CASTAIR Commercial Series 80-gallon vertical air compressor delivers the reliable power and performance that serious professionals de...
View full detailsCampbell Hausfeld 30-Gallon Air Compressor | Honda GX390 | 3-in-1 Com/Gen/Weld | ASME Certified | Campbell Hausfeld
Overview When you need the power of three essential machines but can only transport one, the 30-Gallon Air Compressor with Electric Start combines...
View full detailsTractor Pendulum Fertilizer Spreader for 20–60 HP Tractors| 3 Point Cat 1 & 2 | PTO Driven | Poly Hopper
Video Overview Overview This PTO-driven pendulum fertilizer spreader is built for 20–60 HP tractors with Cat 1 & 2 3-point hitches, deliver...
View full detailsWheel Loader Pallet Forks Attachment – Solid Back Frame Heavy-Duty Material Handling
Overview When you're moving materials with a wheel loader, having the right pallet fork attachment makes all the difference between a productive da...
View full detailsWhat Are Material Handling Attachments and Why Do Contractors Rely on Them?
Material handling attachments are hydraulic or mechanical tools that mount to heavy equipment — skid steers, excavators, forklifts, and telehandlers — to lift, carry, grip, sort, and move materials on construction, agricultural, demolition, and industrial job sites.
What Are the 4 Types of Material Handling Equipment?
The four types of material handling equipment are storage and handling equipment, engineered systems, industrial trucks, and bulk material handling systems. The Material Handling Industry of America (MHI) defines this classification. Attachments fall within the industrial trucks and bulk handling categories, extending the capability of base machines like forklifts, loaders, and excavators.
- Storage and handling equipment — shelving, racking, bins for static material positioning
- Engineered systems — conveyors, automated sortation, robotic palletizers
- Industrial trucks — forklifts, hand trucks, AGVs equipped with handling attachments
- Bulk material handling — hoppers, conveyors, bucket elevators for loose materials
How Do Material Handling Attachments Turn One Machine into a Multi-Purpose Fleet?
A single skid steer paired with 4 to 6 attachments replaces 4 to 6 dedicated machines at a fraction of the cost. A grapple attachment costs $2,000 to $8,000 compared to $80,000 to $150,000 for a dedicated grapple truck. Quick coupler systems enable attachment swaps in under 60 seconds, keeping operators productive across multiple tasks per shift.
What Are the Different Types of Material Handling Attachments?
Material handling attachments fall into 5 primary functional categories: fork-mounted attachments, gripping and grapple attachments, lifting and rigging attachments, carrying and bucket attachments, and specialty rotator and positioner attachments.
What Are the Different Types of Forklift Attachments for Material Handling?
Forklift attachments include 11 primary types: pallet forks, fork extensions, side shifters, fork positioners, rotators, slip-sheet handlers, coil rams, carpet poles, drum handlers, carton clamps, and push/pull attachments. Standard pallet forks handle 2,500 to 10,000 lbs. Fork extensions add 30% to 50% to fork length. Drum handlers lift 500 to 2,000 lbs per drum.
- Pallet forks — 2,500 to 10,000 lbs rated capacity for palletized freight
- Fork extensions — bolt-on sleeves extending reach by 24 to 72 inches
- Drum handlers — single or double drum lifters rated 500 to 2,000 lbs per drum
- Coil rams and carpet poles — cylindrical stock handlers for steel coils and rolled goods
Which Grapple Attachments Handle the Toughest Material Handling Jobs?
7 grapple types cover the heaviest material handling tasks: log grapples, rock grapples, scrap grapples, demolition grapples, sorting grapples, bypass grapples, and rotating grapples. Jaw openings range from 24 to 72 inches. Grapple attachment weights span 500 to 5,000 lbs. Hydraulic requirements run 15 to 40 GPM at 2,500 to 4,000 PSI.
- Log grapples — forestry and timber yard operations
- Scrap grapples — recycling facilities and scrap yards
- Demolition grapples — structural deconstruction and debris sorting
- Rock grapples — quarry, landscaping, and riprap placement
What Lifting and Rigging Attachments Do Heavy Equipment Operators Use?
Lifting and rigging attachments include crane jibs, boom extensions, lifting hooks, spreader bars, lifting beams, and magnetic lifters. Crane jibs carry 2,000 to 10,000 lbs. Spreader bars handle 5,000 to 50,000 lbs. Lifting beams rate from 1,000 to 20,000 lbs. All below-the-hook lifting devices must meet ASME B30.20 standards for design, testing, and inspection.
Which Bucket Attachments Are Designed for Material Handling Applications?
Material handling buckets differ from digging buckets in width, weight, and volume — built wider and lighter for high-volume material transfer. Standard material buckets hold 0.5 to 3.0 cubic yards. Light material buckets for mulch, snow, and grain hold 1.5 to 5.0 cubic yards.
- 4-in-1 buckets — clam, grade, doze, and carry in one attachment
- Skeleton and sorting buckets — separate fines from oversized material on site
- Concrete and mortar buckets — pour-controlled buckets rated 0.25 to 2.0 cubic yards
- AR400 steel floors and T-1 steel cutting edges extend bucket service life
What Specialty Attachments Solve Niche Material Handling Challenges?
Specialty material handling attachments address industry-specific requirements that standard attachments cannot meet. Bale spears handle round and square bales from 800 to 3,000 lbs in agricultural operations. Pipe grapples grip 4-inch to 48-inch diameter pipe for pipeline construction. Tire handlers lift OTR tires weighing 2,000 to 12,000 lbs in mining operations.
- Bale spears and bale clamps — agriculture, hay, cotton, recycled bale handling
- Pipe grapples — oil and gas pipeline, municipal water infrastructure
- Tire handlers — mining haul truck tire service
- Sheet and plate lifters — steel fabrication and structural steel erection
Which Machines Are Compatible with Material Handling Attachments?
Material handling attachments mount to 8 primary machine classes: skid steers, compact track loaders, excavators, telehandlers, wheel loaders, backhoe loaders, forklifts, and utility tractors. Compatibility depends on hydraulic output, rated operating capacity, and mount type. SAE J818 limits skid steer attachment loads to 50% of tipping load.
What Skid Steer and Compact Track Loader Attachments Move Materials Fastest?
Skid steers and compact track loaders use the universal quick-attach plate per SAE J2513 and split into 2 hydraulic classes: standard flow at 15 to 25 GPM and high flow at 25 to 40+ GPM. Pallet forks and material buckets run on standard flow. Grapples and rotating attachments require high flow.
- Standard flow (15–25 GPM) — pallet forks, material buckets, bale spears
- High flow (25–40+ GPM) — grapples, brush cutters, rotating attachments
- Operating capacity match — attachment weight plus load must not exceed rated operating capacity
Which Excavator Attachments Are Built for Material Handling?
Excavator material handling attachments mount via pin-on connections or hydraulic quick couplers sized to the excavator class. Mini excavators (3,000–14,000 lbs) pair with sorting grapples and tilt buckets. Mid-size excavators (14,000–45,000 lbs) run demolition grapples and log grapples. Full-size excavators (45,000–90,000+ lbs) power scrap grapples and magnet lifters.
How Do Telehandler and Wheel Loader Operators Choose the Right Attachment?
Telehandler operators match attachment weight and load center distance to the telehandler's load chart at the required lift height and reach. Wheel loader operators verify the attachment's pin spacing matches the loader's coupler and confirm the combined load stays within the machine's static tipping load at full turn. Hydraulic flow for telehandlers ranges from 20 to 35 GPM.
What Safety and OSHA Standards Apply to Material Handling Attachments?
OSHA, ANSI, and ASME publish specific standards governing material handling attachment use, inspection, and operator training. Non-compliance results in citations, fines, and increased liability exposure on regulated job sites.
What Does OSHA Say About Forklift Attachments?
OSHA standard 29 CFR 1910.178 requires that forklift attachments receive written approval from the forklift manufacturer or a licensed professional engineer before use. Attachments must not exceed the truck's rated capacity minus the attachment's own weight. Operators must have the forklift's capacity plate updated to reflect the derated capacity with the attachment installed. ANSI B56.1 reinforces these requirements.
How Should Operators Inspect Material Handling Attachments Before Each Shift?
Pre-shift inspection covers 6 areas: structural welds, hydraulic hoses and fittings, cylinder condition, pin and bushing wear, mounting plate integrity, and load-bearing surface condition. Cracked welds, leaking cylinders, and worn pins remove the attachment from service until repaired. Inspection records must be documented per OSHA recordkeeping requirements.
What Load Capacity and Rating Standards Must Attachments Meet?
Every material handling attachment carries a rated working load limit (WLL) that accounts for a minimum 3:1 safety factor on structural components. Below-the-hook lifting devices meet ASME B30.20 proof load testing at 125% of WLL. Operators never exceed the WLL stamped or tagged on the attachment regardless of the base machine's capacity.
How Do You Choose the Right Material Handling Attachment for Your Job?
3 specifications determine material handling attachment compatibility: hydraulic flow and pressure output, mount type, and the machine's rated operating capacity. Mismatching any one of these 3 factors causes underperformance, machine damage, or safety hazards.
What Hydraulic Flow and Pressure Specs Should You Match to Your Machine?
Hydraulic flow measured in GPM and hydraulic pressure measured in PSI must match or exceed the attachment manufacturer's minimum requirements. Grapples typically require 15 to 40 GPM at 2,500 to 4,000 PSI. Rotators require 10 to 20 GPM at 3,000 PSI. Running an attachment on insufficient flow causes slow cycle times and premature hydraulic component wear.
Which Quick Coupler and Mount Types Fit Your Base Equipment?
4 mount types cover the majority of material handling attachments: universal skid steer quick-attach plates, pin-on excavator mounts, fork-mounted carriage systems, and hydraulic quick couplers. Universal skid steer plates follow SAE J2513 dimensions. Excavator pin-on mounts require matching pin diameter and pin spacing to the machine's stick.
When Does Renting vs. Buying Material Handling Attachments Make Financial Sense?
Renting makes sense for single-project use under 3 months; buying pays back on attachments used more than 40 to 60 days per year. A grapple renting at $800 to $1,500 per month reaches purchase price ($3,000 to $8,000) within 3 to 6 months. Owned attachments carry no mobilization fees and remain available for every project.
Browse Forge Claw's Material Handling Attachment Selection
Forge Claw carries professional-grade material handling attachments built for demanding job site conditions. Every attachment in this collection meets commercial duty-cycle requirements and ships with verified capacity ratings. You get direct access to product specialists who match attachments to your machine specs — no guesswork, no compatibility surprises. Equipment financing available for qualified buyers.
What Makes Forge Claw's Selection Right for Professional Use?
Every attachment is spec-verified for hydraulic compatibility, mount type, and rated capacity before it reaches the catalog. Forge Claw's product team works directly with contractors and fleet managers to confirm the right fit. You're buying from a nationwide distributor that stands behind every piece of equipment sold.
What Other Products Do Contractors and Equipment Operators Pair with Material Handling Attachments?
Contractors and equipment operators regularly combine material handling attachments with complementary products to expand capability and reduce changeovers.
Agriculture Farm Attachments
Operators running telehandlers and skid steers on farms frequently switch between moving feed, hay bales, and equipment with material handling tools and specialized Agriculture Farm Attachments like manure spreaders or post hole diggers. Both attachment categories mount to the same hydraulic systems, allowing agricultural contractors to maximize their equipment's versatility across different seasonal tasks.
Utility Vehicle Attachments
Compact equipment operators often need both heavy-duty material handling capabilities and specialized tools for maintenance work around facilities and job sites. Utility Vehicle Attachments like snow plows, spreaders, and utility trailers complement material handling gear by extending the same skid steer or compact tractor into grounds maintenance and facility upkeep roles.
Frequently Asked Questions About Material Handling Attachments
What Are the 4 Types of Material Handling Equipment?
The 4 types are storage and handling equipment, engineered systems, industrial trucks, and bulk material handling systems — classified by the Material Handling Industry of America (MHI).
Storage and handling equipment includes racking, shelving, and bins. Engineered systems cover conveyors and automated sorting. Industrial trucks encompass forklifts, AGVs, and hand trucks. Bulk material handling systems include hoppers, bucket elevators, and conveyor belts. Material handling attachments extend the function of industrial trucks and earthmoving equipment within this framework.
What Are the Different Types of Forklift Attachments?
Forklift attachments include pallet forks, fork extensions, side shifters, fork positioners, rotators, slip-sheet handlers, coil rams, carpet poles, drum handlers, carton clamps, and push/pull attachments — 11 primary types.
Each type mounts to the forklift's carriage and serves a specific load shape or handling method. Pallet forks handle standard palletized loads from 2,500 to 10,000 lbs. Drum handlers grip cylindrical containers. Carton clamps squeeze boxed goods without pallets. Every forklift attachment derates the truck's capacity by the attachment's own weight.
What Does OSHA Say About Forklift Attachments?
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.178 requires written manufacturer or professional engineer approval before any attachment is used on a forklift, and the truck's capacity plate must be updated to reflect the derated load.
Attachments change the forklift's center of gravity and reduce its rated capacity. ANSI B56.1 reinforces that operators must be trained on each specific attachment. Using unapproved attachments or exceeding the adjusted capacity rating violates federal safety regulations and exposes the employer to citations and liability.
Is MHE a Forklift?
MHE stands for material handling equipment — a broad category that includes forklifts but also encompasses conveyors, hoists, cranes, pallet jacks, AGVs, and all attachments used to move, lift, store, or control materials.
A forklift is one type of MHE classified as an industrial truck. The MHE category spans four divisions: storage equipment, engineered systems, industrial trucks, and bulk handling systems. Referring to MHE as a forklift is inaccurate because MHE covers dozens of equipment types across warehousing, construction, manufacturing, and logistics operations.
How Do You Maintain Material Handling Attachments to Maximize Lifespan?
Maintaining material handling attachments requires daily pre-shift inspections, greasing pivot points every 8 to 10 operating hours, and replacing hydraulic hoses and worn pins at manufacturer-specified intervals.
Inspect structural welds for cracks after every 250 operating hours. Check hydraulic cylinder seals for leaks weekly. Replace cutting edges and wear plates when material thickness falls below 50% of original specification. Store attachments on level ground or racks to prevent frame distortion. Documented maintenance records extend attachment service life from 3 to 5 years to 8 to 12 years under normal commercial use.
Browse Forge Claw's full selection of professional-grade material handling attachments — equipment financing available for qualified buyers.