I've been driving a Princeton Teledyne for over 10 years and it will run circles around those Moffatts when it comes to off road and raw power. When I tried out a demo from Moffatt, the rep gave me some BS excuse about have a lower hp engine, but a higher torque drive system when I called him out on it's lack of power.
The point i think he was making, is can you take your average forklift through there? Probably not. But i reckon your going to find 1 on google somewhere 😂😂
Been there, done that! .. formwork on side of a hill in Hamilton Brisbane.. and yes.. slow and steady, they will perform.. plus, they actually operate better with the ability of shifting loads by booming in and out to distribute weight over different wheels for traction, or lift the back end up to avoid digging holes while full lock steering.. many tricks these things have, and very versatile.. the limits are what you put on yourself, but I've been in some hairy situations and lived to tell the success!
Yes, moffetts do go off road. I use one five days a week, year round. I deliver brick to residential and commercial jobs. In the summer it’s easy, everything is dry. In the winter when these job sites stay wet it’s a lot harder with the mud, but these machines can be pushed to their limits and get things done. Have I been stuck before, hell yes!!! I’ve been doing it for almost 15 years now and have learned many tricks to get myself unstuck. It’s a great machine if you know how to drive it.
Wow, what an amazing machine
Can't wait to train on this
No rocks required. I work with these machines daily and they can climb inclines and transverse muddy sticky terrain with no problem at all.
I've been driving a Princeton Teledyne for over 10 years and it will run circles around those Moffatts when it comes to off road and raw power. When I tried out a demo from Moffatt, the rep gave me some BS excuse about have a lower hp engine, but a higher torque drive system when I called him out on it's lack of power.
anybody else notice the rocks put there for traction
His front outriggers are down almost dragging the ground. And that pit was just gravel and rock with some water on it.
The point i think he was making, is can you take your average forklift through there? Probably not. But i reckon your going to find 1 on google somewhere 😂😂
Not sticky. Sticky builds up on tires. Wet, yes. Sticky, no.
Show me a real test caring a heavy load through muddy terrain and caring some 48’ long beams. That’s what they’re supposedly made for.
Been there, done that! .. formwork on side of a hill in Hamilton Brisbane.. and yes.. slow and steady, they will perform.. plus, they actually operate better with the ability of shifting loads by booming in and out to distribute weight over different wheels for traction, or lift the back end up to avoid digging holes while full lock steering.. many tricks these things have, and very versatile.. the limits are what you put on yourself, but I've been in some hairy situations and lived to tell the success!
Yep, have done that many times with 48’ LVL’s on muddy job sites and messed up terrain. It takes some skill and patience.
The legs look to low
you a liar. that is graval the moffett dosen't go off road. i use a moffett every day
Yes, moffetts do go off road. I use one five days a week, year round. I deliver brick to residential and commercial jobs. In the summer it’s easy, everything is dry. In the winter when these job sites stay wet it’s a lot harder with the mud, but these machines can be pushed to their limits and get things done. Have I been stuck before, hell yes!!! I’ve been doing it for almost 15 years now and have learned many tricks to get myself unstuck. It’s a great machine if you know how to drive it.