Telehandlers For Sale

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    About Telehandlers

    Telehandlers are better-suited to outdoor use than most mast forklifts. Many telehandlers have four-wheel drive and rough-terrain capabilities, along with lifting capacities of 5,000 to 10,000 pounds and considerable horizontal reach.

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    141 - 168 of 13,893 Listings

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    Hours410
    Location: Dallas, Texas
    Seller: GearHeadz
    Hours1,878
    Location: Tuscaloosa, Alabama
    Hours2,545
    Location: Dallas, Texas
    Seller: GearHeadz
    Hours2,881
    Location: Houston, Texas
    Drive4WD
    Location: Cary, Illinois
    Hours3,385
    Location: Dallas, Texas
    Seller: GearHeadz

    2017 SKY TRAK 10042

    Telehandlers

    Featured Listing
    USD $65,950
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    Rental Prices:
    Daily: USD $650
    Weekly: USD $1,600
    Monthly: USD $3,700
    Lease Prices:
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    Drive4WD
    Location: Cary, Illinois
    Hours4,200
    Location: Dallas, Texas
    Seller: 4K Lift Co

    2026 SKY TRAK 10054

    Telehandlers

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    Call for price
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    Hours1
    Location: Jacksonville, Florida
    Seller: Leppo Rents
    Hours880
    Location: Dallas, Texas
    Seller: GearHeadz
    Hours2,945
    Location: Fountain Inn, South Carolina
    Seller: GearHeadz
    Hours1,653
    Location: Dallas, Texas
    Seller: GearHeadz

    2013 SKY TRAK 10054

    Telehandlers

    Featured Listing
    USD $59,950
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    Rental Prices:
    Daily: USD $650
    Weekly: USD $1,600
    Monthly: USD $3,700
    Lease Prices:
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    Drive4WD
    Location: Cary, Illinois
    Hours1,427
    Location: Cartersville, Georgia

    2016 JLG G5-18A

    Telehandlers

    Featured Listing
    USD $39,950
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    Rental Prices:
    Daily: USD $350
    Weekly: USD $1,000
    Monthly: USD $2,200
    Lease Prices:
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    Drive4WD
    Location: Cary, Illinois
    Hours924
    Location: Quenemo, Kansas
    Seller: Matt Corwine
    Hours330
    Location: Jasper, Alabama
    Seller: Shannon Drummond

    2017 MERLO P50.18HM

    Telehandlers

    Featured Listing
    USD $70,603
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    Hours2,300
    Location: Pefferlaw, Ontario, Canada
    Seller: Ben Borean
    Hours114
    Location: Bemidji, Minnesota
    Seller: Cuperus Construction
    Hours4,108
    Location: Cranston, Rhode Island
    Seller: Imperatore Steel Erectors
    ROPSEnclosed
    Location: Ukiah, California
    Seller: JOHN FOSTER TRUCKING INC
    Hours3,850
    Location: Twin Falls, Idaho
    Seller: Randy Prine Custom Homes
    Hours4,000
    Location: Davison, Michigan
    Seller: Kohler Contracting, LLC
    ROPSOpen
    Location: Richmond, Missouri
    Seller: Beachy Farms
    Hours4,786
    Location: Bowling Green, Kentucky
    Seller: Jenna Hardenberg
    Hours4,292
    Location: Huntington, New York
    Seller: Haddock Contracting INC
    Hours4,437
    Location: Santa Barbara, California
    Seller: KENNEY CONST INC
    Hours300
    Location: Pompano Beach, Florida
    Seller: Distinctive Roofing

    About Telehandlers

    Telehandlers, sometimes called “telescopic forklifts” or “telescopic handlers,” are material handlers with forks or other attachments at the end of an extendable boom instead of a vertical mast. As such, they can lift loads up and down like a forklift but can also extend loads forward and retract them back without moving their drive wheels, allowing them to (for example) load or unload an entire curtainside or roll tarp truck or trailer from one side. Construction crews also use them to lift large loads of building materials several stories. Some telehandlers can also slew (pivot) their carriage to swing a load to one side or the other.


    JLG 1732 Telehandler

    Common Characteristics

    Telehandlers typically roll on pneumatic, polyurethane foam-filled, or solid rubber tires. They’re usually powered by an internal combustion engine running on diesel, or in some cases LPG (liquid propane gas). As with forklifts, LPG-powered telehandlers are right at home working inside, as are electric models like JCB’s zero-emission 525-60E. But they are also commonly better-suited to outdoor work than their mast-equipped brethren, thanks to greater lifting versatility and widespread four-wheel drive and rough-terrain capabilities.

    Lift Capabilities & Attachments

    Maximum lifting capacity is a worthy consideration when choosing a telehandler for your operation. Maximum lifting capacities among the majority of telehandlers top out at about 26,000 pounds (11,800 kilograms), although there are outliers like Manitou’s MHT 12330 (72,753 lbs; 33,000 kg) with greater lifting prowess, and most telehandlers fall in the 5,000- to 10,000-lb (2,268- to 4,536-kg) range. Maximum lifting height is also something to take into account, and is related to boom length. A telehandler’s boom may have multiple stages, enabling it to attain lift heights of 50 feet (15 meters) or more on high-reach models. As with telescopic boom cranes, however, it’s important to remember that maximum lifting capacity decreases as a telehandler approaches its max lift height. This rule also applies as operators extend loads farther away from the machine.

    Besides forks, a telehandler can use attachments such as bale spears, buckets, rotators, grapples, and aerial work platforms, adding to their versatility.

    Find The Right Telehandler

    Visit this site often to find new and used telehandlers for sale from such leading manufacturers as Caterpillar, Gehl, Genie, JCB, JLG (owner of SkyTrak and the discontinued Lull brand), Manitou, Merlo, and many others.

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