When a forklift breaks down during a shift, the expense of fixing it or replacing it is minor compared to the costs suffered if your warehouse can’t operate for a whole day.
The numbers most businesses don’t count
The natural impulse is to see what the repair bill comes to and then move on. But that bill doesn’t begin to cover most of what the breakdown itself is costing.
There’s the idle labor, of course. If three workers can’t pick or pack or load because the machine they need is sitting in the yard waiting for a technician, you’re covering their wages for just standing there. Then there are the late-delivery penalties. These tend to be a fair clause in the contract, but not in the mind of the equipment budget planner. Throw in the expedited freight when you try to play catch-up and restore lost time, and the real cost of a single breakdown is well on its way.
The number that most warehouse managers don’t have right in front of them is the fact that unplanned downtime costs industrial manufacturers dearly ever year.
Building a contingency layer into operations
Even if you look after your gear impeccably well, there will always be times when you need a unit taken off the floor for a complete overhaul. The key question is whether that work is scheduled or unplanned – whether you’re managing the hit on your throughput or it’s hitting you.
Peak season, when the heat is really on, is the acid test of this. A breakdown during a normal week is bad enough. A breakdown during the period when you make a large slice of your margin can hand the competition accounts on a plate that you may not win back.
For many firms, short-term hire is the solution, and you’re better off building it into your plans as a management response to the challenge of keeping slightly old gear in service, rather than the equipment-rental equivalent of dialing emergency services. If you know, for example, that a unit is going in for an overhaul, calling and booking a short-term replacement in that situation is undoubtedly cheaper and easier than waiting for the disaster and then making the call. Operations can bridge the gap during unexpected breakdowns or seasonal peaks by using forklift hire melbourne services to keep throughput stable while primary assets are being serviced.
Where breakdowns actually come from
Mid-shift failures typically do not occur out of the blue. They often result from unaddressed minor issues that no one noticed or bothered to report. Hydraulic leaks and tire wear are the two issues pre-starts most often bring to the attention of mechanics, and both are readily apparent during a routine pre-start walk-around. However, both are also often overlooked during these checks, as they’re usually seen as more of a box-ticking exercise than a genuine safety and reliability measure. When operators are both encouraged to do proper pre-starts and made responsible for following up on what they’ve identified, you’ll stop a substantial portion of these “nobody ever noticed” failures in their tracks.
Operator-caused damage is the other big piece of the puzzle here, particularly with internal combustion rental forklifts. User error is to blame for a sizable majority of easily avoidable mechanical issues, and the lion’s share of these tend to stem from a lack of proper, site- and machine-specific training for the person behind the wheel. Whether a counterbalance or a reach, electric or internal combustion, different models give different warning signs and weaken in different ways. It’s essential that operators receive proper, in-depth user training on each and every machine in your rental or ownership fleet.
The repair-versus-replace calculation
As machines age, better maintenance can slow the rate at which they decline – but it won’t stop it entirely. A useful threshold: if a specific unit’s annual maintenance costs exceed 30% of its current market value, you’re probably past the point where repair makes sense. Total Cost of Ownership is the right frame here – not just what you’ve spent fixing the machine, but what you’ve lost in downtime, what you’ve paid in idle labor, and what the machine is actually worth now versus what it would cost to replace or upgrade.
Fleet management software helps with this. When you’re tracking maintenance history across multiple units, patterns become visible. One forklift with recurring hydraulic issues isn’t bad luck – it’s a data point. Telematics tools take this further, feeding real-time engine health and usage data back to whoever manages the fleet, so problems can be caught before they become failures.
OEE as the scorecard
Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE) is the metric that ties all of this together. It measures the percentage of planned production time that is actually productive – considering availability, performance, and quality. A forklift that is technically working but operating slowly because of an unknown hydraulic problem decreases your OEE as much as a forklift that is completely out of service.
Tracking OEE by the unit provides managers with something tangible to talk about. It turns the discussion from “is the machine on?” to “how much productive output is this machine creating?”
Supply chain disruptions often start at home. One forklift out of service can cause an entire day’s shipment to be delayed, which then impacts every downstream dependency in your supply chain. Treating equipment uptime as a managerial priority – and having the metrics, maintenance, and planning to support it – is not being overly cautious. It’s good business.

