Skip to main content

Skyjack unveils tallest scissor lift for improved access at warehouses

Skyjack has unveiled its tallest scissor lift to date. The SJIII 4740 has a working height of 13.8 m and is the first Skyjack product to enter the machine class. “The biggest advantage is the height,” said Malcolm Early, vice president of marketing at Skyjack. Customers have increasingly asked for a product with a higher reach, in part because facilities have undergone significant changes.
April 19, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The SJIII 4740 is ideally suited to warehouse operations

8349 Skyjack has unveiled its tallest scissor lift to date.

The SJIII 4740 has a working height of 13.8 m and is the first Skyjack product to enter the machine class.

“The biggest advantage is the height,” said Malcolm Early, vice president of marketing at Skyjack. Customers have increasingly asked for a product with a higher reach, in part because facilities have undergone significant changes.

“Warehouses are getting taller and need machines that can reach the shelving – and also for maintenance,” Early said.

Because the machines often work inside, manoeuvrability remains essential. “It has a very tight turning radius,” Early said. A redesigned steering system offers operators an improved 0.54 m turning radius.

The lift also is drivable at full working height.

The SJIII 4740 has an overall capacity of 250 kg and is Skyjack’s widest DC electric scissor at 1.19 m.

The machine remains easy to operate and maintain, key traits of Skyjack products. “Part of our positioning is to be simple,” Early said.
Kristopher Schmidt, Skyjack product manager, said the market has grown beyond what once was a niche.

“Due to the growth of industrial and commercial applications, end-users need higher scissors to reach certain work areas,” he said. “Our customers have been waiting for Skyjack to launch this kind of machine, and with the market growing year on year, it’s arriving at the perfect time.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Building the diamond road in Lesotho
    April 6, 2016
    A job site in the Southern African nation of Lesotho represents one of the most extreme and challenging projects to some key Italian firms of the last 10 years. The project was certainly different from the norm It involves building a road in the Lesotho Mountains, some 200km from the capital Maseru, with the work being carried out by the Cooperative of Building and Cement workers from Ravenna (CMC). CMC, which has ranked among Marini's clients for many years now, is involved in the construction of a
  • Sales of electric two-wheelers will rise sharply in US and Europe
    May 4, 2012
    While two-wheeled transport remains the primary means of transport for millions of people in China and other parts of Asia Pacific, most consumers in North America and Europe have remained committed to their passenger cars. Now, however, high petroleum costs, improved customer perception, and government incentives are all contributing to a growing demand for motorcycles and scooters - including those powered by electricity.
  • G&Z launching new concrete placer
    March 3, 2015
    New material placer being introduced by G&Z – Mike Woof writes. Guntert & Zimmerman is now lifting the wraps from its new MP550 material placer, having announced last year that design work was underway. This machine is designed to boost throughput and overall productivity on site, while being versatile, easy to maintain and service and offering low running costs. According to the firm, the MP550 is the most versatile material placer on the market as it can handle a wide variety of concrete slumps as well as
  • Improved transport for Kobelco Construction Machinery’s demolition boom
    April 25, 2018
    The challenge of transporting the front-end equipment of high-reach demolition-spec excavators has been a key driver in the development of Kobelco Construction Machinery’s latest models, the 40tonne SK400D and 55tonne SK550D. Both offer working heights of 25m and 28m respectively from a three-piece boom.