Platform Elevator Saves Time and Frustration for Operators

Altec's 24-inch platform elevator optimizes operator reach within the work zone.

Altec's 24-inch platform elevator optimizes operator reach within the work zone.

There are many challenges that come with line work, running the gamut from dangerous to inconvenient—or both. Possibly one of the biggest causes of headaches and wasted time, as well as potential safety concerns, is maneuvering between and behind phases on congested poles.

To solve this problem, Altec offers a 24-inch platform elevator, available on a wide variety of aerial devices, including the AA, AN, AM or TA models. It’s also available on ATM/ME/P/PE models.

Save Operators Valuable Time—and Frustration

It’s a common problem in crowded areas. An operator maneuvers up to the worksite, only to stop work and reposition the boom—or sometimes worse, the truck—to reach more challenging areas required of the job. In congested work areas where space is limited, time spent repositioning while minding the boom, the knuckle, potential traffic hazards and other constraints can add up quickly, causing lost time and frustrated operators.

With the 24-inch platform elevator, operators can reduce the time they spend readjusting the boom or truck. The elevator allows operators to move the platform up to 24 inches in a vertical plane without moving the boom, saving valuable time and frustration. The elevators also allow operators to approach the worksite at different angles and helps them reach the back side of a pole when necessary, increasing their range of work within this environment. The increased maneuverability also brings safety benefits, reducing the risk that operators consider attempting unsafe work practices possibly used previously with non-platform elevator aerials.

Don’t Sacrifice Space or Capacity

Since the goal of the platform elevator is to make it easier for operators to maneuver in the physical work environment, it was important to keep the elevator footprint as small as possible. The platform elevator is operated by a two-stage cylinder and fits within the confines of standard controls, which keeps the platform envelope compact—an important factor when working in highly congested areas.

See How the Platform Elevator Can Improve Efficiency and Safety for Your Team

For more information on the 24” platform elevator, reach out to your account manager or contact 1-877-GO-ALTEC.

Reduce the Cost of Idling with JEMS

This article originally appeared in Western Energy Magazine’s Summer 2022 edition

As the world increases its focus on green initiatives, many companies are establishing aggressive sustainability practices to be better corporate citizens. For utility companies and others that require large fleets, finding ways to reduce or eliminate emissions has become a key part of those plans.

Consumer vehicles alone emit around 30 million tons of carbon dioxide annually just by idling. Fleet vehicles may spend anywhere from 60 to 70 percent of the day idling at the jobsite, and for every hour spent idling, 22.4 pounds of CO2 are released into the atmosphere.

To combat these unnecessary emissions, many states have passed laws state a car cannot spend more than three to five minutes idling. Even more states have passed regulations for vehicles such as school busses and vehicles over 10,001 pounds—including bucket trucks and digger derricks. To comply with these anti-idling laws and meet corporate sustainability goals, fleets are turning toward electrification solutions.

“Ultimately our customer base has been tasked with something pretty monumental,” said Paul Flick, Altec Green Fleet sales manager. “They’ve been tasked with having a sustainability program in place that may include a certain percentage of fleet electrification by a certain date, or a similar premise. We feel that we have a good resource for them with the JEMS product.”

Altec’s Jobsite Energy Management System, or JEMS, provides a method to eliminate idling and reduce noise at the jobsite while still offering customers the benefits of a traditional chassis. Without having to idle the engine, JEMS delivers battery power to auxiliary chassis applications such as cab comfort AC and heat, jobsite tools and electric power take-off (ePTO). When JEMS is activated, a vehicle produces zero jobsite emissions with zero reduction in performance.

Not only does idling release unnecessary emissions into the environment, but it also creates unnecessary wear and tear on a vehicle—just an hour of idling is equivalent to driving 25 miles. For large fleets, the cost of idling can add up quickly—both environmentally and in dollars and cents spent on maintenance and fuel.

“While many customers may choose JEMS to meet sustainability initiatives, they’re quickly discovering the substantial cost savings the system delivers by reducing fuel costs and unnecessary wear and tear on a truck,” Flick said. “In any electrification plan, we know a diversified portfolio is important, and JEMS can be the key to achieving those goals.”   

Minimizing Jobsite Idling

JEMS is an integrated plug-in system that uses stored energy from a lithium-ion battery to deliver power to jobsite tools, such as a truck’s hydraulics and cab comfort, eliminating idling and reducing noise at the jobsite.

JEMS delivers power for daily jobsite requirements, depending on jobsite application, and can be conveniently charged using plug-in charging (Level 1 and 2), jobsite charging and mobile charging.

“Customers are looking for three things in an electrification solution, and if you miss one, you’re not going to have a successful product,” said Frank Dean, Altec Green Fleet market manager. “First, the product has to perform and have the same reliability as a diesel truck with no degradation of performance. Second, it needs to include the latest technology. Third, it needs to have a dashboard where they can monitor performance of the technology.”

Altec recently launched its most tested and trusted JEMS products ever, which includes the latest in battery technology: the JEMS S with anti-idle, JEMS SE for small aerial electric power take off (ePTO) with anti-idle, and the JEMS LE for large aerial ePTO with anti-idle. JEMS also has configurable options that customers can select based on their specific application and budget. These options include, but are not limited to, cab comfort air conditioning and heat; mobile and jobsite charging; EV charging cord for plug in charging; and fuel fired heater and extreme air conditioning to supplement the cab comfort solution. JEMS can be installed on a wide range of applications that includes aerial devices, digger derricks and service body trucks.

With the launch of the latest iteration of the JEMS product came JEMS Connect, a fleet dashboard with an intuitive user interface that allows fleets to easily analyze jobsite anti-idle metrics such as fuel savings, emissions avoided and trends. In addition, JEMS Connect identifies opportunities for fleets to optimize their jobsite performance.

“Our product offerings today are really a testament to our history over the last decade,” Flick said. “At one time, we may have had all kinds of models and configurations. To make this product the most seamless and reliable, and to make it completely integrated into our platforms, we needed to narrow down our breadth.”

A company running smaller aerial devices such as telecommunications, service, and/or trouble trucks would be a good candidate for SE, while large construction equipment is a good candidate for LE. The S model is designed for those with no ePTO needs who are simply looking to keep the truck’s cab, which also serves as the operator’s office, comfortable in all climates.

Since its inception, JEMS has saved customers more than 2 million gallons of fuel–more than $10 million in fuel savings based on today’s cost of fuel. The product has also saved more than 75 million idling miles and more than 50 million pounds of CO2 emissions.

An Ever-Evolving Product

Altec’s current JEMS offering is the product of a decade of evolution based on continual technological advancement and listening closely to customer needs and feedback.

Altec first began exploring electrification some 15 years ago as customers began requesting a method of noise and idle reduction at the jobsite, as well as fuel savings. To meet these needs, the company established a strategic relationship with third-party vendors to manufacture a jobsite idling reduction system that was then assembled and installed on Altec equipment.

That arrangement met initial customer needs, but as the need for electrification grew and the focus on sustainability increased, customer needs evolved, too.

“Allowing for air conditioning in the cab of the truck was one of the first extensions of the product,” said Danny Peterson, Altec principal engineering manager. “It went from just providing equipment operation without running the engine, to providing a heated or cooled work environment for the operator without burning fuel.”

Altec began exclusively producing and providing factory installation of the JEMS product in the company’s Elizabethtown, Kentucky, manufacturing facility nearly four years ago.

“We realized that in order for us to deliver the level of quality to our customers that was expected, we needed to think of the product not as a box of parts that anyone can install, but as a highly engineered design,” Peterson said.

Over the last decade-plus of work in the vehicle electrification space, Altec has learned many lessons that have helped craft the JEMS product as it stands today. Initial models were somewhat complicated and required that operators used the truck in a different way than they were used to. For example, cab temperature couldn’t be changed with factory controls—a major pain point for many customers.

“Where we’ve landed with today’s product is really getting back to how utility equipment is used,” Peterson said. “As the product evolved, we had this natural inclination that made the usage of the equipment way more complex, so we were essentially changing the way an Altec customer had to use the equipment.”

The current versions of JEMS integrate more seamlessly and cleanly into Altec equipment, requiring little to no extra work on the operator’s part.

“With our latest design, we are striving and holding tight to this idea that we are not changing the way you use an Altec truck, whether it’s got JEMS on it or not,” Peterson said.

The Future of Electrification

As the consumer electric vehicle market has continued to grow and become more mainstream, so has the understanding of customers regarding fleet electrification, whether it’s through an ePTO application or an all-electric vehicle.

For example, Peterson said, when push-button starts first came out, many vehicle owners missed the action of turning a key. Now, push-button starts have become a common feature on most vehicles.

The same concept applies to electric vehicles. As charging stations become much more readily available, the concept of charging a vehicle has become less cumbersome for customers. According to data from the U.S. Department of Energy, there are approximately 47,000 charging locations across the country, making the thought of charging your vehicle out on the go—or a home—more commonplace.

“One thing that’s been somewhat of a struggle is the concept of plugging in your truck,” Peterson said. “The idea that you had to take the extra step of plugging your truck in at night was somewhat of a hurdle for folks. With EVs becoming more and more common, the idea that you have to plug your vehicle in is becoming more and more understood.”

Increasingly, organizations are establishing fleet electrification goals to meet sustainability initiatives, and a diversified portfolio of MD/HD fleet electrification options is necessary to meet the needs of various applications, Flick said.

While EVs certainly have a place in some applications, JEMS can provide the best of both worlds to help customers meet fleet electrification goals and while also meeting the rigorous demands of utility work, where long days and extreme conditions can be the norm.

“This might be a vehicle that has to go on storm work,” Flick said. “JEMS allows a vehicle to be utilized on storm work or an extended workday without any jeopardy of needing to be plugged back in for charging. The truck can be used indefinitely via mobile or job site charging features and the system design allows for the truck to switch to mPTO to meet an operator’s needs.”

Even as EVs become more readily available and the cost becomes less prohibitive, Peterson and Altec believe there will always be a place for JEMS in the quest to reduce a fleet’s financial and environmental cost.

“We continue to see and feel that there’s going to be a need for a solution that gives you the best of both worlds,” Peterson said. “JEMS helps you meet your electrification initiatives and reduce your carbon footprint without the limitations of an all-electric vehicle that come with certain applications. If you’re working an extra-long shift or trying to get critical infrastructure back on, your truck is still ready to work.”

How the Opti-View Riding Seat Can Improve Work for Your Crew

During a long day on the job, little things can add up—both in time and operator fatigue. Designed with efficiency and safety in mind, Altec’s Opti-View® riding seat for E-Series digger derricks offers operators an unobstructed view of the boom and improved multifunctioning controls.

“We always strive to help our customers work safely and more efficiently,” said Michael Newman, digger derrick market manager. “The Opti-View riding seat checks those boxes.”

The seat is available on all E-series models, including DM45E and DM47E. Check out these three ways the Opti-View riding seat can improve work for your operators.

An unobstructed view

With traditional riding seats, the control panel is directly in front of the operator. When working in closer proximity to the truck or when trying to position the winch hook, these controls can block an operator’s view, requiring them to move to get a better look at what they’re doing. Over the course of a long day, time spent repositioning for a better view can add up.

In the Opti-View seat, controls are located on either side of operator, giving them an unobstructed, clear view of the boom and winch line in all situations. 

Easy ingress and egress allow for easy operator access

In traditional seats, operators enter from the side. The Opti-View seat offers central ingress and egress, creating an unhindered path that makes it easier to enter and exit the seat.

Multifunction joysticks and updated controls make operation seamless

The E-Series control system brought the newest generation of the Opti-View seat to the market, meaning it has updated joysticks and functionality, and gives operators enhanced control of the machine.

The seat features two primary joysticks, rather than the six joysticks that are on standard derrick control panels. The two-joystick setup is similar to that of other equipment such as excavators, with each joystick operating multiple functions.

Responsive pole guide controls allow operators to adjust the speed of the pole guides based on force used on the joystick. Unlike the previous generation of Opti-View, the E-Series update also allows you to have independent or simultaneous control of upper and intermediate booms so that operators can extend them separately or simultaneously. Unit function interlocks are operated via a trigger on the primary joystick which replaces the foot pedal found on standard riding seats.

“The E-Series Opti-View seat really allows operators to finely control the machine,” Newman said. “Once learning the layout, operators can multifunction very fluidly and be very productive with the derrick.”

‘It was a no brainer to put the seat in operation’

Introducing new equipment to operators is the ultimate test of a product, said Andy Ross, supervisor of fleet equipment at Pepco. The Exelon company delivers energy to approximately 894,000 customers in the District of Columbia and Maryland. When Ross demoed the Opti-View seat, it was an immediate hit.

“I brought it to one location to demo and the guys loved it,” Ross said. “It was one of the easiest transitions I’ve had in a truck.”

The unobstructed view and ease of access were major selling points for his operators. The only criticism Ross received, he said, was that he didn’t get the seat sooner.

“The view and comfort of operating it and the layout of the controls make it very user friendly for our operators,” Ross said. “Our operators don’t have to look up over the top of the control panel, which can be difficult depending on where they were working. It was a no-brainer to put the seat in operation. It’s been well received, and I don’t think there’s anything that could be done to make it better.”

To learn more about Altec digger derricks and equipment, call 1-800-958-2555 or contact an Altec representative online.

How a Fair Market Value Lease Can Save You Money

As interest rates rise and material, fuel and equipment costs increase, maximizing savings and conserving working capital is more important than ever. With a Fair Market Value lease from Altec Capital, fleet owners can keep the monthly cost of equipment low, from payments to maintenance costs.

What is a FMV Lease?

FMV leases offer the flexibility of ownership and the lowest monthly payment with terms that match the useful life of the equipment.

With an FMV lease you can improve operations and productivity without the expense of buying the equipment outright or a high down payment. At lease maturity, you may opt to return the equipment and lease a new unit, however, customers can continue to lease on a month-to-month basis or purchase the equipment at its fair market value.

Operate a Truck During its Highest Useful Life

FMV lease terms range from 36 to 120 months, so customers can utilize a truck for its highest useful life. Once that term ends, customers can return the truck and lease a new piece of equipment, avoiding costly repairs and increased maintenance costs that can occur with older equipment.

A shorter life cycle often leads to lower repair cost and frequency, which means less downtime. This allows customers to spend more time in the field focused on operations and maximizing profits.

Fair Return Provisions

Altec believes in complete satisfaction in all aspects of a customer’s experience. Lease holders can rest assured that the same Altec customer service they expect will be provided throughout all phases of the lease, including the end of lease return process. Altec Capital account managers work hand in hand with customers to reduce end of lease expenses. Altec Capital’s ultimate goal is to create an end of lease customer experience that is seamless, equitable and fair.

Experience the Benefits of a New Truck

The FMV lease is ideal for customers who are eager to experience the latest innovation in new equipment. When FMV lease holders return their equipment at lease maturity they can then finance a brand new piece of equipment, complete with the latest technology. For many customers, the regular upgrade to a new piece of equipment boosts employee morale.

By working with Altec Capital, your account managers are monitoring current lead times for new equipment along with the term of customer leases, helping customers place orders that most closely match maturity schedules and life cycles.

About Altec Capital

Altec Capital’s focus is meeting customers’ unique equipment financing needs. Not only does Altec Capital finance equipment, but it also helps customers manage and maintain their equipment fleet. While our core business is financing Altec products, Altec Capital also offers financing for light duty trucks and other non-Altec, third-party equipment.

Most importantly, financing with Altec Capital is easy. Altec Capital offers a single source solution for all your financing needs, which means no more managing multiple banking relationships. Altec Capital’s innovative e-signature and web-based application process make it easy for customers to obtain financing.

For more information on Altec Capital’s financing options, call (888) 408-8148 or email finance@altec.com

Get Your Truck Ready with Customized Truck Kits

Your new truck has arrived, and your team is ready to get to work. However, if you don’t have the tools you need to stock it, getting that truck on the job may be a complicated process.

“When a truck comes in, customers don’t necessarily have everything ready, especially for a newer vehicle or a new to the fleet vehicle,” said Chris Knapp, Altec Supply sales manager.  “Warehouse teams then have to organize tools, possibly ordering from multiple manufacturers with different lead times.”

To save customers valuable time and money, Altec Supply offers customized truck kits that will arrive when your new unit does. These kits can be added to new, used and rental equipment so that your truck is ready to go to work when it arrives.

Get Your New Truck Ready to Work

Rather than waiting for various orders from various manufacturers to trickle in, a truck kit from Altec Supply comes complete with the tools you need to get the job done.

“When it’s all wrapped up in one, the tools show up right when the truck shows up, and all customers have to do is pull the tools out of boxes and put it in the bins they want, and out they go,” Knapp said.

Truck kits can be configured to include a range of tools and supplies from shovels to electrical test equipment based on the needs of the customer.

Combat Supply Chain Challenges

As global supply chain challenges continue, truck kits are even more valuable to customers.

Altec Supply account managers can help customers navigate longer lead times and stock shortages. As a truck is being produced, Supply account managers monitor manufacturer lead times to make sure products are ordered and will arrive before a truck’s completion.

“We’re aware of manufacture lead times and can order in an appropriate time to make sure the kit is complete when the truck is ready,” Knapp said.

Additionally, Altec has increased its ready-to-ship inventory at regional warehouses across the nation. Tools and supplies are stocked based on customer needs, meaning Altec has what you need when you need it.

If a tool is unavailable due to supply chain challenges, Altec Supply account managers assist customers with finding an alternative product. In many cases, this is a chance for customers to try a new and improved tool they may not have realized was available to them.

“We’ve got our finger on the pulse of what’s in stock and what lead times are,” Knapp said. “We’re here to help you get your kits in a timely manner.”

Get Personalized Assistance Outfitting Your Truck

Whether you’re looking to stock your truck with tools and accessories or to purchase items such as utility sunblock and bug spray, Altec’s Supply Store is your one stop shop for all the items you need.

For more information on truck kits or to explore tools and accessories available from Altec Supply, visit altecsupply.com or call 1-877-GO-ALTEC, option 1. You can also contact Supply via email at tools@altec.com.

How Much is Jobsite Idling Costing Your Fleet?

As the world continues to increase its focus on vehicle electrification solutions, finding ways to reduce or eliminate emissions has become a priority for both individuals and companies alike. In the last two decades, many states and counties have identified reducing unnecessarily idling as an effective way to reduce emissions.

Consumer vehicles alone generate around 30 million tons of carbon dioxide annually just by idling. To combat this, many states have passed laws that limit idling between three and five minutes. Even more states have passed regulations for vehicles such as school busses and vehicles over 10,001 pounds—including bucket trucks and digger derricks.

Not only does idling release unnecessary emissions into the environment, but it also creates unnecessary wear and tear on a vehicle. For large fleets, the cost of idling can add up quickly—both environmentally and in dollars and cents spent on maintenance and fuel.

Reduce emissions and save money with JEMS

For more than 10 years, Altec’s Jobsite Energy Management Systems (JEMS) has been helping customers save money and reduce their emissions by preventing unnecessary idling at the job site. JEMS is an integrated plug-in system that uses stored energy from a lithium-ion battery to eliminate idling at the jobsite and deliver power to jobsite tools such as a truck’s hydraulics, jobsite tools and cab comfort.

JEMS delivers power for your daily jobsite requirements, depending on jobsite application, and can be conveniently charged using plug-in charging (Level 1 and 2), jobsite charging, and mobile charging. When JEMS is activated, a vehicle produces zero jobsite emissions with zero reduction in performance.

Since its inception, JEMS has saved customers:

  •  More than 2 million gallons of fuel
  • More than $10 million in fuel savings based on today’s cost of fuel
  • More than 75 million idling miles
  • More than 50 million pounds of CO2

Calculate your fleet’s cost of idling

To calculate how much idling is costing across your fleet, fill out the form here to utilize Altec’s jobsite idling calculator. By entering the average number of hours a truck in your fleet idles daily, as well as how many trucks are in your fleet, the cost of idling calculator will project fuel costs, maintenance costs and the total cost of idling. The calculator also projects your fleets annual CO2 emissions.

If you are ready to take the next step in reducing your cost of idling and electrifying your fleet, visit Altec’s Green Fleet website, or contact Altec at 800-958-2555.

Why Fleet Maintenance is a Necessary Part of Your Safety Program

Whether you know it or not, fleet maintenance has a big effect on your safety program. Complex equipment such as aerial devices, cranes and digger derricks are built to work hard in tough environments, designed to exacting national standards and intended to reward owners with a long service life. They are also a large investment that needs to be protected by following the manufacturer’s guidance for safe operation and maintenance.

It’s likely your safety team is hard at work enforcing safe work rules, implementing programs, compiling safety metrics and tracking OSHA reports. Meanwhile, a poorly maintained piece of equipment may be creeping closer to failure, threatening to undo all those efforts keeping workers safe on the job.

Make Maintenance Programs a Priority

Fortunately, Altec’s unit maintenance manuals give you extensive guidance on preventive maintenance schedules and detailed instructions on performing the important tasks that keep your equipment safely in service.

Your fleet needs the right kind of maintenance program, with inspection intervals timed for the severity of operating conditions. Heavily used units need more frequent inspection and maintenance. Think of the difference between a New York City taxicab and Grandma’s Crown Vic. Which one will need more preventive maintenance or repair?  Of course, sitting idle in the garage can also pose problems, but a well-designed fleet maintenance program will consider that too.

Take Your Training Seriously

Fleet programs are part of the equation, but there are human factors, too: the people using the equipment and the people maintaining it. Both groups could introduce risk or mitigation effects into overall operational safety. In large part, this depends on your effectiveness in two key training areas—training your operators and training your technicians.

Train Your Operators Properly

Trained operators break less equipment because they use it correctly. Too often, employers condone work methods that misuse and abuse equipment. This essentially trains operators to damage equipment, and it puts everyone at the job site at serious risk of injury.

Train Your Technicians Properly

Letting untrained technicians inspect and maintain complex equipment gives a dangerous false sense of security. If you don’t have trained mechanics who follow Altec’s maintenance procedures, call Altec Service. We have the resources to help keep your units safely in the field, protecting your workers and getting the job done.

Altec is Here to Help

Building a connection between your fleet maintenance and safety teams is a solid move toward protecting your workers. Start by asking the question, “How are we training our technicians and operators?”

If you need help, contact Altec Service to discuss maintenance training options. For operator training, contact Altec Sentry. Let our experts help you fix and operate your Altec units properly, putting your safety program on a better path toward prevention.

How to Get the Most Capacity out of Your Digger Derrick

Digger derricks are designed to tackle the most demanding of jobs, from transmission and distribution to backyard infrastructure. Whether you’re setting poles or moving material, these five tips can help you get the most capacity out of your digger derrick.

Get Familiar with the Capacity Chart

Altec’s digger derricks are a durable, reliable piece of equipment, but it’s important to stay within the limits outlined on your machine’s capacity chart. Altec offers derricks with 10-foot load ratings that range from 3,800 to 30,000 pounds.

Each machine’s capacity chart includes model and serial number, included options, use type, rated unit capacities and deductions. Load charts are provided by load radius, or the distance from the center of rotation to the load line, as well as by associated boom angles.

Altec’s derricks are equipped with a hydraulic overload protection system (HOP) to prevent conditions that excessively overload the booms. At approximately 110% of rated hydraulic capacity, the HOP system should engage, stopping the functions that increase the overload including winch raise, boom lower, boom extend, and digger dig. The complementary functions are all available to lessen the load on the boom and disengage HOP.

While the HOP does prevent significant overloading, if the system is forced to engage, operators have already overloaded the machine, which can cause excessive wear and tear.

Extend the Upper Boom First

The booms of Altec’s digger derricks are controlled independently, so operators can choose which boom to extend in what order. The upper boom of Altec’s digger derricks are often made of fiberglass and nested inside the steel intermediate boom.

Many operators assume the steel boom is stronger and extend it instead of first extending the fiberglass, but this reduces your derrick capacity. When extending the intermediate boom without extending the upper boom first, the derrick is now supporting the weight of an upper boom that’s not being used. Instead, fully extend the upper boom first, and then extend the intermediate boom as necessary.

Remove Accessories When Not in Use

Accessories attached to the boom reduce the machine’s capacity. For example, a platform with liner reduces capacity by 165 pounds, and an 8-foot material handling jib reduces capacity by 150 pounds.

Even though a reduction of 150 or 165 pounds may not seem excessive in comparison to total capacity, it can be the difference in having to reposition the derrick to complete a job. Removing unused accessories also reduces the boom tip profile when working in congested areas.

Understand Two Parting

When a load exceeds the winch capacity or winch line rated working strength, but is within the capacity of the unit, two parting is required. Check out this short video for more information. Two parting is also explained in the unit operator’s manual.

Consider the Winch Placement

Altec offers digger derricks with turntable or boom tip winches. The winch placement is determined before the truck is built as part of the work order. Boom tip winch configurations typically have less capacity as the boom must support the weight of the winch and supporting structure.

Consider these tips as you approach taller and heavier infrastructure, and don’t hesitate to reach out to your account manager to learn more about Altec’s derrick models and features.

Need Help? Please contact us at 1-877-GO ALTEC, option 1.

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Altec Inc.

210 Inverness Center Drive
Birmingham, AL 35242-4834
Phone (205) 991-7733
Fax (205) 408-8601

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