For manufacturers of high-purity sanitary components, a scratched surface on a 316L stainless steel tube isn't just cosmetic—it's immediate scrap. Traditional forklift-loaded racks are destroying your Ra surface finish values and eating up valuable production floor space. There is a safer, denser way to store your inventory.
In the world of hygienic stainless steel manufacturing—whether you are producing heat exchangers for pharma or tube fittings for the dairy industry—the integrity of your raw material is paramount. You deal in expensive alloys, electropolished surfaces, and strict ASME BPE standards.
The standard fixed cantilever rack is the enemy of these standards. Why? Because it forces you to use a forklift for every retrieval. When a forklift operator tries to pull a 20-foot bundle of polished tubing from a middle shelf, two things happen:
Figure 1: High-density storage eliminating the need for forklift aisles.
The fundamental difference with a Roll Out Cantilever Rack (also known as a crank-out or telescopic rack) is that the storage levels are not static. Each arm level acts as a drawer that extends 100% out into the aisle.
For a facility processing high-quality hygienic stainless steel components, this changes the retrieval logic entirely:
Figure 2: Ergonomic crank handle allows a single operator to move tons of steel effortlessly.
If you are storing raw stock for manufacturing valves, pumps, or actuators, compare the two systems directly:
| Feature | Standard Cantilever Rack | Roll Out Cantilever Rack |
|---|---|---|
| Retrieval Method | Forklift (Requires maneuvering) | Overhead Crane / Vacuum Lifter (Vertical Lift) |
| Surface Protection | High Risk (Sliding & Impact) | Zero Contact (Strap or Vacuum Lift) |
| Aisle Width Required | 12-15 Feet (For Forklift turn) | Only operator walking space |
| Access Selectivity | Front bundles block rear bundles | 100% Selectivity (Pick any drawer) |
Your inventory is heavy. A bundle of 20-foot solid stainless bars or thick-walled pipes adds up quickly. Our racks are not light-duty shelving.
Figure 3: Optional dividers ensure different diameter tubes and bars never mix.
For facilities running 24/7 production of components like butterfly valves or spray balls, manual cranking might be too slow. We offer fully electric roll-out systems. With a simple remote control, the operator can extend the rack while positioning the crane, slashing cycle times and reducing operator fatigue.
Figure 4: Electric systems streamline the workflow for high-frequency access.
Q: Can we add protection to the arms to prevent scratching our polished tubes?
A: Yes. We typically install UHMW (Ultra-High Molecular Weight Polyethylene) liners on the cantilever arms for clients in the sanitary industry. This provides a soft, non-abrasive surface that protects the polished finish of your tubes.
Q: We process 20-foot (6m) raw lengths. Does this rack support them?
A: Absolutely. The system is modular. We adjust the number of columns and the spacing to perfectly support 20-foot or even 40-foot lengths, ensuring the material doesn't sag or bend.
Q: How does this help with contamination control?
A: By moving storage vertical and eliminating forklift traffic in the storage zone, you significantly reduce the amount of floor dust and rubber tire particulate kicked up onto your clean inventory.
Q: Can I store pallets of fittings on these racks too?
A: While designed for long goods, the arms can be decked with steel grating or wood to create a full shelf, allowing you to store pallets of valve bodies, clamps, or gaskets alongside your tube stock.
Q: Is the installation disruptive to our production?
A: Our roll out cantilever racks are modular and bolted. We can install them in sections. Once the base is anchored (as shown in Figure 5 below), the assembly is fast, minimizing downtime in your manufacturing plant.
Figure 5: Secure anchoring ensures stability for heavy stainless loads.