phone
Contact Us
(65) 6542 3232
Logistics warehouse with pallet racking, cartons, roll cages and packing workflow.
Warehouse and fulfilment route

Logistics, 3PL and E-commerce Fulfilment Solutions in Singapore

For 3PL, warehouse and e-commerce fulfilment sites, start with the workflow: inbound, storage, picking, packing, dispatch, loading, movement and access. Product choices should follow the bottleneck, not only a brand name or catalogue category.

InboundStoragePick-packDispatchProtectMoveAccess

Quick answer

Logistics and fulfilment buyers should review storage method, pallet and carton flow, aisle width, route distance, floor condition, pick height, packing process, traffic routes and impact points before choosing racking, protection, tugs, platforms, benches, MRO or marking products.

Start with the buyer situation

Pick the closest situation first, then move only as far as the enquiry needs.

Confirm routeIs this the right industry?

Check the boundary first if the enquiry may belong to another operating environment.

Check boundary
Send firstNeed a practical first reply?

Send the minimum site details so the enquiry can be routed before model review.

Send details
Compare quoteAlready comparing a quote?

Use quote intake before treating another option as the same fit.

Review quote
Gather proofNeed a stronger shortlist?

Collect photos, measurements, documents and readiness checks before product-path review.

Build evidence

Send these first

Send these first when the enquiry is about warehouse storage, fulfilment flow, protection, movement, packing or access.

Send firstWorkflow areaInbound, storage, pick face, packing, dispatch, loading bay, returns, rack end, door or traffic route.The route should follow the bottleneck.
Send firstLoad and movementPallet, carton, cage, trolley, cart or wheeled load, with weight, wheels, route distance and frequency if known.Handling and movement fit depends on the real route.
Send firstImpact or access pointRack end, wall, column, kerb, door, pedestrian route, packing station or low-level access task.Protection and access should not block work flow.
Send firstQuote or current methodCurrent product, existing quote, current MHE, existing racking, current protection or manual handling method.Compare by workflow fit, not price or brand alone.

For logistics, the fastest route starts from workflow, load, floor, access and impact points.

Choose or switch route

Use this boundary before treating a warehouse or fulfilment enquiry as a product shortlist.

Route choiceUse this page
Use whenThe main problem is storage flow, pick-pack, dispatch, rack protection, movement, access or warehouse support work.
CheckSend workflow area, load, route, impact point, floor and current method.
Route choiceSwitch route
Use whenUse Cold Chain for chilled or frozen storage, Food and Beverage for production-support documentation, or Electronics for technical workcells.
CheckSwitch when temperature, contact risk, ESD process or production-zone evidence dominates.
Route choiceKeep held
Use whenCapacity, safety, productivity, model-fit, slope, damage-reduction, quoted-product claims and broad catalogue wording.
CheckHold these until layout, load, route and product documents are checked.

What Y K TOH can reply with

After the first logistics message, the reply should show whether the enquiry is about storage, protection, movement, packing, access or support products.

Reply partWorkflow route
Can includeStorage, MPM protection, MasterMover movement, packing bench, low-level access or support-product route.
Keep controlledCapacity, slope, safety, productivity and model-fit wording stays held.
Reply partMissing details
Can includeLoad, pallet or carton size, route width, floor, vehicle path, impact point, access path or current method.
Keep controlledA shortlist should not be treated as final until the route is clear.
Reply partNext action
Can includeA site-data request, category shortlist, quote review path or switch to cold chain, electronics or food and beverage.
Keep controlledClaims follow layout evidence and current product documents.

Warehouse quote review intake

Use this when a warehouse buyer is comparing racking, protection, handling, packing or access quotes.

Quote intakeQuoted itemRack type, guard type, tug, pallet truck, trolley, packing bench, access platform, quantity, dimensions, load or accessories.Do not compare by price or brand alone.
Quote intakeWorkflow proofInbound, storage, pick-pack, dispatch, loading bay, aisle width, pick height, parcel range or access task.The quote route should match the bottleneck.
Quote intakeLoad and routePallet size, load weight, wheel type, floor, slope, route distance, turning space, vehicle path and impact location.Capacity, slope, safety and model-fit wording stays held.
Quote intakeExpected replyY K TOH can narrow storage, MPM protection, MasterMover, access, packing or support-product routes.Exact model and engineered capacity follow exact layout evidence.

For logistics quotes, the useful comparison is workflow fit: storage flow, impact point, route, load, floor and access that must stay open.

Choose review depth

Use this guide to choose the shortest logistics reading path before opening every checklist and matrix.

Review depthFast route
Use whenThe issue is storage flow, pick-pack, dispatch, protection, movement, packing or access.
Read nextUse quick answer, send-first details, route boundary and reply expectation.
Review depthQuote review
Use whenThe buyer has a storage, guard, tug, trolley, packing bench or access quote to compare.
Read nextCheck quote intake, photos, measurements, readiness and product-option checks before comparing the quoted item.
Review depthFinal shortlist
Use whenThe route is clear but load, floor, route, access or proof still controls the shortlist.
Read nextUse product path, final checks and reply format after site proof is available.

Choose how far to review

Choose the shortest path after the route map: first-route guidance, proof gathering, or product and reply review.

Start hereFirst-route check

Use when the buyer is still choosing the industry route, site problem route, first details or first reply.

Evidence packProof gathering

Use when photos, measurements, documents, readiness or product-option checks decide whether a quote can be compared.

Compare and replyProduct path and reply

Use when proof is available and the next step is product path, brand role, final checks or reply format.

Photos to send

Use these photo angles before asking for storage, protection, movement, packing or access recommendations.

Warehouse overviewShow inbound, storage, pick-pack, dispatch, loading bay or the route where the bottleneck appears.
Rack or storage close-upShow pallet size, beam levels, rack-end exposure, cartons, pick face, clear height or current storage method.
Traffic and impact pointShow forklift, pallet truck, trolley or cage routes, impact marks, doors, walls, columns, rack ends and route width.
Load and wheelsShow the load, pallet, cage, trolley, cart or wheels involved in the movement problem.
Packing or access taskShow packing bench height, parcel range, label flow, tools, low-level access or work area that needs support.

Measurements to confirm

Use these measurements before shortlisting storage, protection, movement, packing or access products for logistics and fulfilment sites.

Storage dimensionsPallet size, pallet weight, beam level, clear height, aisle width, rack run length, SKU flow and pick-face requirement.
Traffic routeForklift, pallet truck, trolley or cage path width, turning area, door opening, loading bay route and dispatch staging space.
Impact locationRack-end, wall, door, column, corner or kerb dimensions, fixing surface and distance from the vehicle path.
Movement loadLoad weight, wheel diameter, wheel material, route distance, floor condition, slope and repeat frequency.
Packing or access taskBench height, parcel range, label flow, operator count, access height, reach distance and daily task frequency.

Documents to check

Use these documents before comparing storage, protection, handling, packing or access quotes for logistics and fulfilment sites.

Storage design or rack quoteRack type, beam level, pallet size, load, layout sketch, aisle width and stated installation scope.
Protection quote or drawingBarrier, guard, bollard or rack-protection type, fixing method, post spacing, height and impact location.
Handling equipment pageLoad, wheel detail, route condition, slope, power or battery details if applicable and accessory list.
Packing or access detailsBench or access dimensions, task frequency, operator count, accessory expectations and work route.
Installation scopeDelivery, assembly, anchoring, site access, installation window and site constraints.

When the route is ready

Use these gates before deciding whether a logistics enquiry is ready for route guidance, site-fit shortlist or exact quote review.

Ready whenRoute clue only
Enough evidenceWarehouse area, quoted category, workflow bottleneck, storage problem, impact point, movement issue or access task is known.
Use only forRoute to storage, protection, handling, packing or access. Hold model, capacity, slope, fixing and productivity claims.
Ready whenSite-fit review ready
Enough evidenceRack/storage photos, pallet data, aisle width, load, route, floor, impact location, packing task and access details are available.
Use only forShortlist storage, MPM, MasterMover, BRAVI, Treston, STOCKY, MYSTAR, INNOPHYS, LPS or DYKEM routes where the task fits.
Ready whenProduct-proof review ready
Enough evidenceRack quote, protection drawing, handling product page, packing/access details, installation scope or approval documents are available.
Use only forCompare exact quoted products or product options. Keep engineering, safety, capacity and unsupported comparison wording held.

Product option checks

Use this before treating another racking, protection, handling, packing or access quote as the same fit for a logistics site.

Product option checkStorage fit check
CompareCompare rack type, beam levels, pallet size, load, clear height, aisle width, pick face and dispatch staging.
Keep controlledDo not compare rack quotes without the same layout and load basis.
Product option checkProtection fit check
CompareCompare impact point, vehicle path, route width, fixing surface, protection height and access that must stay open.
Keep controlledDamage-reduction and safety wording stays held until site and product proof match.
Product option checkHandling fit check
CompareCompare load type, wheel condition, floor, slope, route distance, turning space, frequency and operator effort.
Keep controlledTugs, pallet trucks, forklifts and trolleys are not interchangeable by category name.
Product option checkPacking or access fit check
CompareCompare bench height, parcel range, label flow, access height, tools, operator count and daily task frequency.
Keep controlledWorkflow fit decides whether a quote is comparable.

Match buyer wording to the route

Use these common warehouse phrases to keep the enquiry on the correct logistics route.

Buyer wordingWe need more pallet or carton storage
Route firstStart with racking, longspan, boltless, pick-face or dispatch staging review.
SendSend pallet or carton size, load, SKU flow, aisle width, clear height and layout photos.
Buyer wordingForklifts keep hitting racks, doors or columns
Route firstStart with MPM protection, traffic separation and impact-point review before adding more movement.
SendSend impact photos, vehicle type, route direction, fixing surface and access path.
Buyer wordingManual pushing is too hard or too slow
Route firstStart with handling route review, then compare pallet truck, trolley, tug or other movement options.
SendSend load weight, wheel details, floor condition, slope, route distance and turning space.

Match search wording to routes

Use this router when a warehouse, 3PL or fulfilment buyer searches by product type but still needs route review.

Buyer search wordingRoute toEvidence to sendKeep held
Warehouse racking or shelvingRoute to storage, pick-face, staging or dispatch layout before product selection.Pallet size, carton size, SKU flow, load, aisle width, clear height, layout photos and current storage method.Capacity, engineering, safety and final rack design wording.
Rack guard, barrier or bollardRoute to MPM protection review by impact point, traffic direction and access path.Impact photos, vehicle type, route width, fixing surface, rack/wall/door/column location and access that must stay open.Damage-reduction, safety, fixing and suitability claims.
Electric tug, pallet truck or trolleyRoute to movement review by load, wheels, floor and route frequency.Load weight, wheel type, floor, slope, route distance, turning space, repeat frequency and current handling method.Load, slope, productivity, operator-effort and model-fit claims.
Packing bench or access platformRoute to packing support or access review after storage, picking and dispatch flow are known.Work height, parcel size, operator count, access height, task frequency, blocked access and site photos.Access, productivity, safety and exact model wording.

Which Y K TOH division fits

Use this division route when a warehouse, 3PL or fulfilment enquiry needs to be split across Y K TOH's storage, equipment, MRO or facility-support areas.

Y K TOH divisionUse whenEvidence to sendKeep held
Storage RackingPrimary route for racking, shelving, pick-face, staging, pallet storage, carton flow and rack-end exposure.Layout photos, pallet or carton size, load, SKU flow, aisle width, clear height and current storage method.Capacity, engineering, load rating and final storage-design wording.
Warehouse EquipmentPrimary route for tugs, pallet trucks, trolleys, access platforms, packing support, barriers and protection.Load, wheels, route distance, floor, slope, turning space, access height, traffic direction and impact photos.Safety, productivity, load, slope, access and model-fit claims.
MRO ChemicalsSupport route for marking, cleaners, lubricants, torque seal and daily maintenance products after the warehouse route is known.Application surface, exposure, residue concern, SDS/TDS need, current product and exact task.Chemical suitability, residue, food-area, ESD and compliance wording.
Builders HardwareSupport route when the issue includes doors, walls, fixing points, facility hardware or maintenance hardware around the warehouse.Door, wall, floor or fixing photos, dimensions, current hardware and site-use notes.Fire, code, fixing, load, safety or access-compliance wording.
Household and Commercial GoodsUse only for general buyer-list or commercial supply items that are not controlled by storage, movement or protection.Product list, quantity, use area, photos and replacement reference.Industrial, cold-room, food-area or safety suitability wording.

Use this route when

Use this page when the enquiry is mainly a warehouse, 3PL, e-commerce or fulfilment workflow problem. Switch route when temperature, food-area documentation or ESD process requirements become the main decision.

Use this page when

  • The problem is inbound flow, storage, picking, packing, dispatch, loading bay, racking, movement, access or warehouse protection.
  • The loads are parcels, cartons, pallets, cages, carts, trolleys or general warehouse goods.
  • The first decision is workflow, storage density, route protection, handling method or packing support.

Check another route when

  • Use Cold Chain when temperature, cold rooms, chilled or frozen storage, refrigerated dispatch or condensation drives suitability.
  • Use Food and Beverage when production support, usage-zone review, cleaning exposure or food-area documentation dominates.
  • Use Electronics when process, ESD requirement, technical bench configuration or component-handling drives the decision.

Compare the buying route first

Use this filter when a buyer is comparing quoted alternatives such as racking quotes, barrier systems, pallet trucks, forklifts, electric tugs, packing benches or access platforms.

ComparingRacking or storage quote
FilterCompare SKU flow, pallet size, pick-face access, aisle width, clear height and dispatch staging before choosing a rack type.
SendPhotos, pallet details, current layout, pick flow and target storage change.
ComparingBarrier, rack guard or bollard
FilterCompare the impact point, traffic direction, route width, fixing surface and whether protection blocks access.
SendImpact photos, MHE type, route dimensions, rack-end or wall location and access that must stay open.
ComparingPallet truck, forklift or electric tug
FilterCompare load type, wheel condition, route distance, floor, slope, turning space, frequency and operator effort.
SendLoad weight, wheel photos, route distance, floor photos, slope and current handling pain point.
ComparingPacking bench or access platform
FilterCompare pick height, packing volume, parcel size, tools, label flow, operator count and daily task frequency.
SendWork area photos, height, bench size, parcel range, operator count and access task.

Already comparing a quote?

Use this when comparing another warehouse, racking, protection, handling, packing or access quote.

Quote itemStorage or protection quote
SendRack type, beam level, pallet size, load, barrier type, guard location, route width, fixing surface and quoted scope.
Keep heldCapacity, engineering, safety and damage-reduction wording stays tied to exact design and product proof.
Quote itemHandling quote
SendPallet truck, forklift, tug, trolley or cage details, load weight, wheels, floor, route distance, slope and turning space.
Keep heldDo not treat handling equipment as interchangeable until load, wheels, floor and route are checked.
Quote itemPacking or access quote
SendBench size, work height, parcel range, label flow, access height, operator count, tools and daily task frequency.
Keep heldThe quote should be compared by workflow fit, not only price or brand.

WAREHOUSE123 stage route

Use WAREHOUSE123 to decide whether the logistics issue starts with layout, movement equipment or daily support work.

Stage 1

Design & Build

Storage layout, racking, rack protection, loading-bay protection and traffic separation.

Use when density, pick flow, rack-end impact, doors, columns or pedestrian routes are the first constraint.
Stage 2

Equip

Pallet trucks, electric tugs, access platforms, trolleys and route equipment.

Use when the layout works but pallets, carts, cages, parcels or operators still move poorly through the route.
Stage 3

Enhance

Packing benches, trolleys, MRO support, marking, labels and daily workstation improvements.

Use when storage and movement are clear but packing, dispatch, marking or maintenance remains slow or inconsistent.

Route the site problem first

The recommendation should follow the operating problem, site data and claim limits before product or model selection.

Storage and pick facesReview pallet racking, longspan, boltless shelving, bins, SKU flow, pick faces, load and aisle width.
Protect impact pointsReview rack ends, columns, doors, walls, kerbs and traffic separation before adding more route activity.
Move wheeled loadsReview pallet movement, cages, trolleys, route distance, wheel type, slope and floor condition.
Pack and support workReview packing tables, Treston benches, tools, labels, small parts and dispatch preparation.

Proof before product shortlist

Before product routes are shortlisted, check the site evidence that separates storage, protection, movement, access and packing problems.

Layout and flow proof

Photos of inbound, rack aisles, pick faces, packing stations, loading bays, rack ends, columns, walls and the current bottleneck.

Load and route proof

Pallet size, load weight, wheeled-load details, MHE type, route distance, floor condition, slope, turning area and repeat frequency.

Claims held until checked

Capacity, damage reduction, productivity, slope, model-fit and safety wording stay held until the exact layout, load and product route are checked.

How much proof is enough

Use this ladder before treating a route as product fit. It keeps route advice, site fit and exact product proof separate.

Proof levelLevel 1: Route clueIndustry page, product family, buyer wording, broad photo or quote category.
Enough to doConfirm whether this child page is the right route or whether another industry page should be used.
Keep heldExact model, compliance, food-contact, ESD, cold-room, access, manual-assist and productivity wording.
Proof levelLevel 2: Site fitPhotos, dimensions, load, route, floor, operator access, exposure, temperature, ESD need, cleaning process, contact risk or document need.
Enough to doShortlist the category lane, brand route or follow-up question that matches the site problem.
Keep heldFinal suitability, safety, model-fit, capacity, sensitive-zone and document-based claims.
Proof levelLevel 3: Product proofExact model, datasheet, SDS, TDS, certificate, current quote, installation condition or approved configured set.
Enough to doCheck whether a product route can move from review wording to exact-product wording.
Keep heldLaunch wording and public compliance wording until separately approved.

Recommended category lanes

Use these category lanes to keep the logistics recommendation practical before any model or link choice is made.

Storage and pick-face lanes

Pallet rackingLongspanBoltlessCarton flow

Use when the site problem is storage density, SKU flow, carton picking, receiving, staging or dispatch layout.

  • Check pallet size, load, aisle width, clear height, turnover and whether an engineering review is needed.

Warehouse protection lanes

Rack protectionGuard railsBollardsDoor and wall protection

Use when forklift, pallet truck, trolley or loading-bay traffic creates rack-end, wall, door, kerb or pedestrian-route exposure.

  • Check impact photos, vehicle type, fixing surface, route width and the access path that must stay open.

Movement equipment lanes

Tug & TowPallet TruckHand Truck TrolleyHeight Access

Use when the buyer is comparing forklifts, pallet trucks, electric tugs, trolleys or low-level access for daily movement.

  • Check load weight, wheel type, route distance, floor, slope, turning space and repeat frequency.

Packing and support lanes

Packing BenchWorkshop WorkbenchMarkingMRO support

Use when pick-pack, labelling, dispatch checking, maintenance or marking is the bottleneck after storage and movement are clear.

  • Check parcel size, work height, tools, label flow, operator count, surface and SDS/TDS needs.

Recommended product and brand routes

Use these routes to decide whether the enquiry starts with storage layout, impact protection, movement, packing support, access or MRO before shortlisting exact products.

Storage and racking

Pallet rackingLongspanBoltless

Use when the main question is pallet storage, SKU density, pick-face access, receiving flow or dispatch staging.

  • Check pallet size, load and beam levels.
  • Check aisle width, floor condition and MHE route.
  • Hold capacity and engineering claims until exact configuration is checked.

MPM warehouse protection

Rack protectionBarrierBollard

Use when the site has rack-end, wall, door, column, corner, kerb or traffic impact risk.

  • Map impact points before choosing protection type.
  • Review vehicle type, route and impact exposure.
  • Hold safety or damage-reduction claims until proof is approved.

MasterMover and material handling

TugsWheeled loadRoute review

Use when heavy wheeled loads, roll cages, carts or repeat movement routes make manual movement or vehicle choice unclear.

  • Check load weight, wheel type and route distance.
  • Check slope, turning area and floor condition.
  • Hold model-fit, slope and productivity claims until site data is checked.

BRAVI, Treston, LPS and DYKEM support

AccessWorkstationsMRO

Use these routes for low-level access, packing workstations, maintenance support and marking needs where the task fits.

  • Check working height, bench size, accessories, surface and exposure.
  • Review whether STOCKY, MYSTAR or INNOPHYS routes are relevant before naming models.
  • Hold ESD, safety and compliance claims unless the exact requirement is confirmed.

Brand roles at a glance

Use this snapshot to keep warehouse storage, impact protection, movement, packing, access and MRO enquiries on the right route before comparing quoted items.

Storage route

Brand route

Inbound, storage, picking, packing, dispatch and staging layout.

  • Pallet racking, longspan, boltless shelving and pick-face support.
  • Pallet or carton size, load, aisle width, clear height, SKU flow and layout photos.

MPM

Brand route

Forklift, pallet-truck, trolley, cage or loading-bay traffic exposure.

  • Rack guards, barriers, bollards, column, wall, door, kerb and loading-bay protection.
  • Impact point, vehicle type, route width, fixing surface and access path.

MasterMover / STOCKY / MYSTAR

Brand route

Repeat pallet, cage, cart, trolley or heavy wheeled-load movement.

  • Electric tugs, pallet trucks, hand trucks, trolleys and wheeled-load handling.
  • Load weight, wheels, route distance, floor, slope, turning space and current method.

Treston / BRAVI

Brand route

Pick-pack support, labelling, dispatch checking, work access or access-platform tasks.

  • Packing benches, support workstations and low-level access routes.
  • Work height, parcel size, operator count, access height, task frequency and site photos.

LPS / DYKEM

Brand route

Maintenance, marking and dispatch-support tasks after the main warehouse route is known.

  • MRO, marking, cleaners, layout marking and torque seal support.
  • Surface, exposure, application details, SDS/TDS need and current product.

Where each brand fits

Use this map to connect common logistics problems to the brand route before comparing a quote, category or exact product.

Brand routeWhat it normally supportsBest-fit use caseProof needed
Storage routePallet racking, longspan, boltless shelving and pick-face support.Inbound, storage, picking, packing, dispatch and staging layout.Pallet or carton size, load, aisle width, clear height, SKU flow and layout photos.
MPMRack guards, barriers, bollards, column, wall, door, kerb and loading-bay protection.Forklift, pallet-truck, trolley, cage or loading-bay traffic exposure.Impact point, vehicle type, route width, fixing surface and access path.
MasterMover / STOCKY / MYSTARElectric tugs, pallet trucks, hand trucks, trolleys and wheeled-load handling.Repeat pallet, cage, cart, trolley or heavy wheeled-load movement.Load weight, wheels, route distance, floor, slope, turning space and current method.
Treston / BRAVIPacking benches, support workstations and low-level access routes.Pick-pack support, labelling, dispatch checking, work access or access-platform tasks.Work height, parcel size, operator count, access height, task frequency and site photos.
LPS / DYKEMMRO, marking, cleaners, layout marking and torque seal support.Maintenance, marking and dispatch-support tasks after the main warehouse route is known.Surface, exposure, application details, SDS/TDS need and current product.

Brand-to-product route matrix

Use this matrix to connect the warehouse problem to Y K TOH's brand and product route before model selection or public claims.

Brand routeProduct/category routeUse whenCheck before recommending
Storage routePallet racking, longspan, boltless shelving and pick-face supportStorage density, SKU flow, receiving, staging, pick-pack and dispatch layout.Pallet size, load, aisle width, clear height, layout photos and whether engineering review is needed.
MPM protection routeRack protection, barriers, bollards, column, wall, door and loading-bay protectionRack-end impact, traffic separation, wall/door exposure, kerb damage and pedestrian-area protection.Impact photos, vehicle type, route width, fixing surface and the access path that must stay open.
MasterMover / STOCKY / MYSTAR routeElectric tugs, pallet trucks, hand trucks, trolleys and wheeled-load handlingRepeat movement, heavy or awkward wheeled loads, pallet movement and operator-effort reduction review.Load weight, wheel type, floor, slope, route distance, turning space and current handling method.
Treston / BRAVI / LPS / DYKEM supportPacking benches, access platforms, MRO support and industrial markingPacking flow, low-level access, daily maintenance, labels, marking and dispatch support.Work height, bench size, access task, surface, exposure, SDS/TDS needs and task photos.

Next product path after proof

Use this path after the warehouse route and brand role are clear, before moving into exact rack, protection, handling, access or packing products.

Product pathStorage route
Review nextReview racking, shelving, pick-face, carton, pallet and staging categories against layout and flow.
Hold until proofCapacity, engineering, compliance and fit wording until load, layout and design proof are available.
Product pathMPM protection route
Review nextReview rack guards, barriers, bollards, column, wall, kerb, door or loading-bay protection by impact point.
Hold until proofSafety, damage-reduction and access claims until fixing, traffic and route evidence support them.
Product pathMasterMover / STOCKY / MYSTAR route
Review nextReview tugs, pallet trucks, hand trucks, trolleys or wheeled-load handling by load and route.
Hold until proofLoad, slope, frequency, productivity and model-fit claims until product documents and site route proof are available.
Product pathTreston / BRAVI / LPS / DYKEM support
Review nextReview packing, access, MRO or marking routes after the main warehouse flow is known.
Hold until proofAccess, productivity, chemical, marking and task-fit wording until exact task and documents are checked.

Buyer comparison

Use this when warehouse buyers are comparing storage, protection, handling, packing or access options. Compare layout, load, route, impact point and proof before treating alternatives as equivalent.

Buyer choiceWhat to compare firstWhat to send Y K TOH
Racking versus floor storageSKU count, pallet size, turnover, pick face, floor area, aisle width and load.Photos, pallet details, current storage layout and target flow.
Rack guard, barrier or bollardImpact location, vehicle path, rack-end exposure, pedestrian area, door or column risk.Impact photos, MHE type, route map and dimensions.
Pallet truck, forklift route or electric tugLoad type, route distance, wheel condition, floor, slope, turning area and repeat frequency.Load weight, wheel photos, floor photos, route distance and handling pain point.

What changes the recommendation

The logistics route changes when the storage method, traffic pattern, picking flow and movement task change. Send the details that show how goods enter, move, get packed and leave the site.

Storage and pick flow

Pallet size, load, SKU count, turnover, pick face, aisle width, clear height, current layout and the storage problem you want to solve.

Movement and traffic

MHE type, wheeled-load details, route distance, floor condition, slope, turning space, loading bay flow and impact photos.

Packing and access

Parcel size, packing volume, work height, operator count, pick height, access task, tools, labels and current bottleneck.

Selection checklist

Use this checklist before choosing a logistics product route. It keeps storage, movement, protection, access and packing decisions in the right order.

Workflow constraintIdentify whether the first bottleneck is inbound, storage, picking, packing, dispatch, loading bay, access or returns.
Storage and load dataConfirm pallet or carton size, SKU flow, turnover, load weight, aisle width, clear height and current storage method.
Movement routeCheck load, wheels, floor condition, slope, route distance, turning space, repeat frequency and current handling method.
Protection and work accessMark rack ends, columns, doors, walls, pedestrian routes, packing areas and any access that must stay open.

Enquiry brief

Use this brief when sending Y K TOH a warehouse, 3PL or fulfilment enquiry. It keeps the recommendation anchored to layout, flow, load and impact evidence.

Send these details

  • Photos of inbound, storage, pick faces, packing stations, loading bay, rack ends, columns, doors and traffic routes.
  • Pallet size, carton size, load weight, SKU count, turnover, aisle width, clear height and current storage method.
  • Current handling method: forklift, pallet truck, trolley, cage, cart, manual push or wheeled load.
  • Route distance, floor condition, slope, turning area, repeat frequency and the bottleneck you want to remove.

Keep these claims held

  • Capacity, productivity, damage-reduction and safety claims.
  • Electric tug, pallet truck, platform, rack or barrier model choice.
  • Slope, load, fixing, engineering and compliance wording.

How to send the details

Use this format when sending a warehouse, 3PL, e-commerce fulfilment or dispatch enquiry.

AreaInbound, storage, pick face, packing, dispatch, loading bay, returns, rack end, door or traffic route.
LoadPallet, carton, cage, trolley, cart or wheeled load, with weight, size and movement frequency if known.
RouteAisle width, route distance, floor condition, slope, turning area, MHE type and blocked access.
Current methodManual handling, pallet truck, forklift, trolley, cage, cart, existing racking or current protection.
BottleneckStorage density, pick speed, damage point, impact point, packing flow, dispatch congestion or access height.
PhotosWide area photo plus close photos of load, wheels, rack end, floor, impact point, door or packing station.

Photos of the bottleneck matter more than a long description. Send the route and load details first, then Y K TOH can narrow the storage, protection, movement or packing path.

Recommendation checks

Use this process after sending warehouse photos, pallet or carton data, route details and the current bottleneck.

1
Confirm the workflow bottleneck

Decide whether the issue starts with inbound, storage, pick face, packing, dispatch, loading bay, movement or access.

2
Map storage, protection and movement

Check whether racking, MPM protection, pallet movement, tugs, platforms, benches or support products should come first.

3
Hold exact-product claims until proof

Shortlist the route, then keep capacity, productivity, slope, safety and model-fit wording held until the layout and product documents support it.

Final checks before reply

Use this final check before a logistics, 3PL or fulfilment enquiry is narrowed to a product family, model route or configured set.

CheckWorkflow fit
Before recommendingThe route matches the real bottleneck: storage, picking, packing, dispatch, loading bay, protection, access or movement.
EvidenceWorkflow photos, layout, current method and the point where work slows down.
CheckLoad and route proof
Before recommendingHandling, access and protection choices are checked against load, wheels, floor, slope, distance and turning area.
EvidenceLoad weight, wheel photos, floor photos, route distance, slope and turning space.
CheckCapacity and safety wording
Before recommendingCapacity, damage-reduction, safety, slope and productivity wording stays tied to the exact layout and product documents.
EvidenceRack design inputs, product documents, site dimensions and use conditions.

What the reply should cover

After a logistics buyer sends site details, the reply should narrow the workflow route before naming exact racking, protection, handling, packing or access products.

Reply partWorkflow route
Can includeConfirm whether the first issue is storage, picking, packing, dispatch, loading bay, movement, access or protection.
Keep controlledAvoid treating every warehouse enquiry as only a racking or handling-equipment quote.
Reply partShortlist path
Can includeReturn the storage, MPM protection, MasterMover, access, packing or support-product route that best matches the bottleneck.
Keep controlledCapacity, productivity, slope, safety and model-fit wording stays held.
Reply partMissing evidence
Can includeAsk for pallet data, load, wheel details, floor, slope, route distance, impact photos or packing flow only where it changes the route.
Keep controlledKeep follow-up questions focused on the physical bottleneck.
Reply partNext action
Can includeSuggest a category quote path, layout review, protection review, movement review or site-visit decision.
Keep controlledFinal model or engineered capacity follows exact design inputs and documents.

Logistics route or another operating environment?

Use the handoff when a warehouse, 3PL or fulfilment enquiry becomes controlled by temperature, food-area documentation, ESD process or technical workcell requirements.

Stay on Logistics

Use this page for inbound flow, storage, picking, packing, dispatch, loading bay, warehouse protection, movement, access and general fulfilment support.

Switch to Cold Chain

Use Cold Chain when chilled storage, frozen storage, refrigerated dispatch, condensation, cold-room doors or temperature exposure controls the decision.

Switch to Food and Beverage

Use Food and Beverage when usage zone, production support, cleaning exposure, contact risk or food-area documents control the decision.

Switch to Electronics

Use Electronics when ESD need, technical workstation configuration, component handling, tool control or application-product documents control the decision.

Send mixed-route details

If more than one route applies, send photos, load, route, floor, temperature, ESD need, food-area exposure, cleaning exposure and document requirements.

Common buyer questions

These answers keep the route logic readable for busy buyers in plain page content.

What should a 3PL warehouse review first?Start with workflow, load, storage method, pick-pack flow, traffic route, impact points and access needs before choosing products.
When should I consider an electric tug?Consider a tug route when wheeled loads are repetitive, heavy, awkward, long-distance or difficult to move manually. Exact fit depends on load, wheels, slope, floor and route.
When should protection come before handling equipment?If rack ends, doors, walls, corners, columns or walkways already show impact risk, protection should be reviewed before adding more route activity.
What details help compare pallet trucks, forklifts and tugs?Send load weight, wheel details, floor condition, route distance, slope, turning space, frequency and current handling method before comparing handling routes.
When does packing need its own route?Give packing its own route when parcel size, label flow, tools, operator count or dispatch checking is the bottleneck after storage and movement are clear.