Forklift Classes
The ITA/OSHA seven-class framework is the universal organizing structure for forklift specification. Every spec sheet, training program, and RFP uses it. Know it cold.
ITA/OSHA Class Framework
Section titled “ITA/OSHA Class Framework”| Class | Power Type | Primary Equipment | Indoor/Outdoor |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | Electric Motor — Rider | Counterbalanced sit-down & stand-up | Indoor |
| II | Electric Motor — Narrow Aisle | Reach trucks, order pickers, turret trucks | Indoor |
| III | Electric Motor — Hand | Walkie pallet jacks, walkie stackers, tow tractors | Indoor |
| IV | IC Engine — Cushion Tire | Cushion tire counterbalanced | Indoor (smooth floor only) |
| V | IC Engine — Pneumatic Tire | Pneumatic tire counterbalanced | Indoor/Outdoor |
| VI | Electric or IC — Tow Tractors | Tuggers, spotters, airport tractors | Both |
| VII | Rough Terrain | Telehandlers, vertical mast RT | Outdoor/jobsite |
Classes I-III cover 90% of warehouse and distribution work.
Class I: Electric Counterbalanced — The Workhorse
Section titled “Class I: Electric Counterbalanced — The Workhorse”Aisle: 11-13 ft | Lift: 20-25 ft | Capacity: 3,000-12,000 lb
| Model | Capacity | Voltage | New Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toyota 8FBCU25 | 5,000 lb | 48V | $28,000-45,000 |
| Crown FC 5725-50 | 5,000 lb | 36V | — |
| Hyster E50XN33 | 5,000 lb | 48V | — |
The Toyota 8FBCU25 is the industry default: parts ubiquitous, service network unmatched, every operator has touched one.
Productivity: 20-30 pallets/hr (putaway into single-deep rack)
When to specify: Standard palletized receiving, putaway, and retrieval in conventional selective racking. 10-13 ft aisles, 20-25 ft lift heights.
Class II: Narrow Aisle — Three Sub-Types
Section titled “Class II: Narrow Aisle — Three Sub-Types”Reach Trucks
Section titled “Reach Trucks”Aisle: 9.5-11 ft | Lift: up to 45 ft | Price: $17,000-47,000
Operator stays at floor level; forks extend on pantograph mechanism. Standard upgrade from counterbalanced when density or height is needed without VNA commitment.
| Model | Capacity | Max Lift | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crown RR 5700 series | 2,500-5,500 lb | up to 45 ft | $17,000-47,000 |
| Raymond 7700 | 3,000-4,000 lb | up to 42 ft | $20,000-45,000 |
Productivity: 25-35 pallets/hr (single-deep), 18-25 pallets/hr (double-deep) Double-deep reach saves aisle count but reduces throughput ~25%. Run the math: high-velocity ops often don’t justify the density gain.
Order Pickers
Section titled “Order Pickers”Aisle: 5.5-8 ft | Lift: 18-40 ft | Operator rises with the forks
- Low-level (18-25 ft): 50-80 line picks/hr; Crown PC 4500 is the benchmark
- High-level (up to 40 ft): 35-55 picks/hr; Crown SP 3400, Raymond 5500/5600 series
Labor delta: Low-level at 50 picks/hr vs. high-level at 35 picks/hr = 43% more operators for same throughput. Budget for this when evaluating rack height.
VNA Turret Trucks
Section titled “VNA Turret Trucks”Aisle: 5.5-6.5 ft | Lift: up to 50 ft | Price: $50,000-80,000+
Forks rotate 90 degrees — service both sides without the truck turning. Maximum density.
Three non-negotiable prerequisites:
- Floor flatness F50 — ±1/8 inch over 10 feet. Standard warehouse concrete is F25-F35. Grinding costs $5-15/sq ft. Cannot skip.
- Guidance system — wire guidance (embedded in floor) or rail guidance (bolted to floor, easier to reconfigure). Required.
- Truck cost — $50-80K+ each. Must have spare or guaranteed service agreement. One breakdown stops the aisle.
Density payoff: 50-75% more storage positions vs. conventional selective racking.
| System | Aisle Width | Density vs. Counterbalanced |
|---|---|---|
| Counterbalanced (Class I) | 11-13 ft | Baseline |
| Reach truck (Class II) | 9.5-11 ft | +20-30% |
| VNA turret truck (Class II) | 5.5-6.5 ft | +50-75% |
When to specify VNA: Land/lease is expensive and expansion isn’t viable. Ceiling height 30 ft+. Consistent, predictable throughput (VNA is one-aisle-at-a-time — high variance creates bottlenecks).
Class III: Electric Hand Trucks — Chronically Underinvested
Section titled “Class III: Electric Hand Trucks — Chronically Underinvested”Most operations underinvest here, and it costs real money every shift.
| Equipment | Pallets/Hr | Ideal Distance | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manual pallet jack | 15-20 | <40-75 ft | $300-800 |
| Electric walkie (Crown WP 3200) | 40-60 | 40-200 ft | $5,500-7,500 |
| Electric ride-on (Crown PE 4500) | 60-80+ | 200 ft+ | $8,000-15,000 |
The math: 400 pallets/shift with manual jacks = 20+ operators. With powered walkies and ride-ons = 7-10 operators. Delta: 10-13 heads/shift at $18-22/hr = $400-600K/year savings from swapping $600 hand jacks for $6,000 powered units.
Class IV/V: IC Engine — When Electric Doesn’t Win
Section titled “Class IV/V: IC Engine — When Electric Doesn’t Win”IC beats electric when:
- Three-plus continuous shifts (battery logistics become a bottleneck)
- Outdoor dock operations (weather, uneven surfaces)
- No charging infrastructure and no near-term capital to build it
- Cold storage receiving docks (lead-acid loses capacity in cold)
- High-intensity short-cycle dock work (propane refill = 3 min vs. 8-hr battery charge)
Operating cost: Propane ~$0.08-0.12/hr | Electric ~$0.05-0.08/hr at $0.10/kWh. At 20 trucks, 2,000 hrs/yr: $20-40K/yr difference favoring electric — meaningful, but doesn’t alone justify infrastructure capital on a short lease.
Selection Logic (4-Step Framework)
Section titled “Selection Logic (4-Step Framework)”- Aisle width — primary constraint. Existing building narrows your options before anything else.
- Lift height — match to top beam height in racking. Counterbalanced maxes at ~25 ft; reach trucks to 45 ft; VNA to 50 ft.
- Throughput requirement — use productivity benchmarks to calculate number of trucks needed.
- Power source — single shift + electrical service + controlled environment = electric. Three shifts + outdoor + legacy infrastructure = evaluate IC.
Maintenance replacement threshold: When annual maintenance exceeds $4/operating hour (excluding scheduled PM), replace regardless of how the truck looks.