Floor Loading for Grain Pushers & Telehandlers
Agricultural stores rely on concrete floors that cope with significant turning forces from grain pushers, bucket loaders and telehandlers. We provide reinforced concrete slabs, polished concrete surfaces and concrete resurfacing systems developed to withstand constant shovelling, side pressure from grain banks and repeated wheel articulation within bulk stores.
20 +
Years
Experience in Agricultural Store Flooring
Grain stores create concentrated pressure where loaders push against bulk piles, while telehandlers introduce high lateral shear during turning and stacking. We design and renew floors that support these forces, reduce surface breakdown and help maintain smooth, predictable vehicle movement throughout harvest, drying and long-term storage cycles.
Our Expertise
How Grain Pushers and Telehandlers Affect Floor Performance
Bulk grain handling places distinctive demands on concrete floors. Grain pushers travel repeatedly along identical routes, applying continuous blade pressure to compacted crops that can create friction points at the slab edge. Telehandlers intensify these forces with tight turning arcs, articulated wheel paths and varying bucket loads, all of which place rotational stress on the surface.
Well-prepared grain stores often use
reinforced slab construction
with additional edge thickening and joint control to minimise early wear. Where older stores show signs of abrasion or rutting,
specialist resurfacing systems
can restore level surfaces before the next harvest. In circulation areas feeding dryers and intake pits,
polished concrete
provides a smooth, low-dust finish similar to those used in
agricultural storage facilities
where repeated machine movements demand consistent floor behaviour.
Key Floor Behaviours in Agricultural Loading Operations
Floor Issues Caused by Grain Pushers and Telehandler Movements
As grain stores age, surface deterioration often follows predictable patterns linked to loader routes, crop handling pressures and tight turning cycles. Identifying these issues early helps prevent deeper slab damage and harvest disruption.
Abrasion zones where blades and tyres repeatedly press against compacted grain.
Joint spalling that forms jolts as telehandlers pass during loading and outflow.
Surface ruts caused by repeated travel with variable bucket loads.
Edge cracking near retaining walls where grain pushers exert sideways pressure.
Polishing or slick patches where tyres continually rotate during reversing or tight manoeuvres.
Dusting and surface breakdown that complicate hygiene checks between crop cycles.
Our Process
STAGE 1
We track vehicle routes, blade positions and turning areas to understand how forces act on the existing floor. This includes identifying rutted paths, edge stress points near grain banks and transitional areas where machines frequently accelerate or reverse. Findings guide a structured approach to reinstatement or slab upgrade.
STAGE 2
Where new floors are required, we design reinforced slabs with joint layouts suited to grain handling patterns. In older structures, resurfacing and levelling compounds rebuild worn surfaces, while polished finishes reduce dust generation in high-use corridors feeding silos, conveyors or cleaning stations.
STAGE 3
Agricultural programmes demand precise timing. We coordinate works around intake periods, drying schedules and crop movement windows. Zones are segregated, floors reinstated and surfaces prepared for immediate use so stores can return quickly to full operational capacity.
Telehandlers generate distinct lateral forces when reversing into grain piles or pivoting in confined bays. Understanding these arcs helps identify where the slab requires additional surface strength to resist rotational wear and tyre scuffing.
Blade contact points concentrate significant horizontal force as grain pushers compact material against retaining walls. These zones often need targeted reinstatement to prevent progressive edge fracturing and loss of surface shape over the storage season.
Loader operators typically follow identical lines when filling, levelling or emptying stores. Repeated passes form obvious wear paths that can be mapped and considered during resurfacing to extend service life without major slab reconstruction.
Harvest schedules, moisture variation and temperature swings all influence slab behaviour. Floors designed with these cycles in mind maintain a more stable surface profile and reduce the likelihood of ruts or loose material appearing mid-season.
We repair and upgrade grain store floors across the UK, supporting safe loader movement and consistent performance under seasonal grain pressures.
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