Glass is one of the world’s oldest man-made materials. It was being made in Mesopotamia and Egypt as long ago as 3000 B.C. Besides sand, ash, and limestone there is one crucial basic ingredient: glowing heat. Temperatures of between 1,000 and 1,600°C are needed to transform the constituent parts into the versatile and malleable material. In ancient times, glass was mainly used for making pots and containers but it now has a range of highly specialized areas of application. One is the – literally – astronomically sized telescope mirrors that are made by the Schott company.
Lifting our gaze to the heavens
At the Mainz center of excellence for glass ceramics, two electric forklift trucks from KION subsidiary STILL are part of an extraordinary project. This is where the mirror segments are being made for the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT), which is scheduled to go into operation at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in the Atacama desert in Chile in 2024. Measuring 39 meters in diameter, it will be the biggest telescope ever made and will enable scientists to see further into space than ever before.
In Mainz, Schott is making around 800 mirror elements for the telescope. Extreme precision is required when handling the casting molds, which contain molten glass and can be more than four meters wide, and this is where the STILL RX 60-80 electric forklift truck with its sensitive hydraulic control comes in. The driver’s cab is set to one side which, together with the high seat position, provides unobstructed views of the cast parts. This enhances workplace safety and helps to ensure that the products are not damaged. A smooth operation is absolutely critical to this complex project. To make a glass ceramic with the required properties from the raw glass, it has to be heated and ceramicized several times and this process takes almost four months for each glass. The trucks are in constant use, maneuvering the mirror elements through the various process stages at the furnace. During peak times, one of the precious disks is finished every day.
Massive irons in the fire
Another vivid example of how hot it can get in intralogistics is provided by Bohemia Rings in Zámrsk in the Czech Republic, where a fleet of forklift trucks made by KION subsidiary Linde Material Handling helps to keep the production line running. Each year, the plant produces around 20,000 metal rings measuring up to four meters in diameter for use in wind turbines, generators, construction equipment, and CT scanners. Many different processing steps are required to make the rings. In the forge workshop, five industrial furnaces operate at temperatures of up to 1,250°C to prepare the metal cylinders for further processing. Handling them in the initial stages while they are still glowing hot is extremely demanding. As soon as the iron cylinders, which can weigh up to seven tonnes, are hot enough, a truck takes them to a huge press for the next step. This means the trucks are constantly moving around with their red-hot loads – and thanks to special protective equipment for their tires, hydraulic hoses, and rear-view mirrors, they are well equipped to cope with the intense heat.
Conditions are also extremely challenging in the production plant of Fondium, a leading manufacturer of cast iron automotive components. You have to be tough to work in the hellishly hot environment of the smelting furnaces – and that goes for the machinery too. The whole site is extremely dusty, and the uneven ground makes maneuvering tricky. Almost 50 STILL trucks operate in these conditions, helping the company to handle the high production volumes of around 180,000 tonnes per year. Numerous modifications have been made to the five diesel trucks that are used for heavy transport in the smelting plant, from heat-resistant front and side panels to metal protection plates for tires, headlights, and tilt cylinders. Both the trucks and their drivers are thus optimally protected.