I can’t believe OP is actually forklift certified
Not only am I forklift certified I’m also one of the mentors certifying people and the sole forklift inspector at my work inspecting roughly 80 forklifts everyday.
It’s pretty great NGL
You can inspect 80 forklifts in a day? That’s 10 every hour in an eight hour shift. That’s 7.5 minutes a forklift every day all day.
Including prestart paperwork? Oil levels, belt conditions, operational check of each one and all the functions?
It’s actually a little less time than that as I get 2 15 minute breaks during that 8 hours.
Checking the oil, coolant, hydraulic fluid, and the radiator for debris takes about 30 seconds. Add an extra few seconds to check the belt tension using the little jig I made and you get the hard part done in less than a minute. Most of the time saving here is from how I park the lifts and how I plot my path through them.
Checking the hydraulics for proper movement is fairly short as well and during that you can check the horn and lights.
The parking brake gets checked when you try to move the lift and so are the reverse alarms and reverse lights.
Checking the tank presence sensor is done on approach to the lift by disconnecting the tank latch before hopping on and attempting to start the lift, if it properly detects the disconnected latch it won’t start.
Tire wear is checked on approach as well due to having a line painted on my boot that is just over an inch off the ground (if the tires have less tread than that they need new tires)
Checking for leaks is fairly quick as well as it’s basically looking for wet spots on the lines and dots on the ground.
Logging the hours is done typically while the lifts auxiliary systems (that we add) are starting up.
The paperwork takes awhile though NGL
So in general I can get through all the lifts in about 5.5 hours and the paperwork takes the rest of my shift.