Flatness and Level Control in Picking Systems
Automated and semi-automated picking depends on predictable floor behaviour. Small changes in flatness, local level, joint edges and transitions can alter guidance accuracy, sensor readings and wheel response. This article supports our wider distribution centre flooring guidance by focusing on how flatness and level control affect system reliability in live operations.
20 +
Years
Supporting Distribution Floors
The risk is rarely “a flat floor” versus “a bad floor”. The risk is local change in the strips where systems repeat movement. A small ridge at a joint, a settled patch at a turning entry, or a shallow hollow at a transfer lane can cause repeat vibration and guidance correction that escalates into downtime.
How Flatness Affects Guidance, Sensors and Handling
Automated and semi-automated equipment repeats the same paths, so small level differences become repeat events rather than occasional bumps. A slight lip at a joint can trigger vibration at the same point every cycle. A shallow hollow can alter wheel contact and shift tracking accuracy in guided lanes. Where manual trucks share the same routes, braking and turning can amplify these effects and widen the affected strip.
On new builds, control strips can be set during concrete slab installation. On existing floors, resurfacing can correct local behaviour without changing the whole building. In inspection corridors, polished concrete can help reveal repeat vibration points and wear lines.
Flatness Behaviours That Trigger System Correction
Where Flatness and Level Issues Show Up First
Issues appear where equipment repeats movement with limited variation. The same points see repeated vibration, guidance correction or wheel chatter, then debris and wear build around them. These strips matter because a small change becomes a daily reliability problem rather than an isolated defect.
Guided travel lanes where repeat passes make small lips immediately noticeable.
Transfer points between zones where level change affects tracking and stopping.
Pick module approaches where short braking events repeat across the same joints.
Aisle end turns where steering correction repeats and widens the affected strip.
Crossing lanes where manual trucks intersect guidance routes at shallow angles.
Door approaches where settlement and debris create uneven response under wheels.
Our Approach
STAGE 1
We map the routes where automated equipment repeats movement, including guided lanes, transfer points, pick module approaches and turning entries. We also note where manual trucks share the same strips, because braking and cornering can change how the floor is loaded. The aim is to define the control strips where small level change becomes a repeat event that affects reliability.
STAGE 2
We review local level, joint edges and transitions across the control strips, then relate findings to real behaviour such as vibration points, guidance correction, wheel chatter and debris lines. This avoids treating the floor as a uniform surface and instead targets the specific locations where the system is reacting. It also shows whether previous repairs introduced ridges or steps.
STAGE 3
Corrections focus on restoring predictable response in the control strips, such as smoothing local hollows, removing lips at joints and refining transitions at crossings. Works are phased to keep routes functioning, with clear reopening checks under normal cycles. The goal is confirmation in service: the route should run without repeat vibration and without new debris lines forming at the same points.
Guidance and repeat travel rely on consistent wheel contact. When a joint lip or shallow hollow becomes a repeat event, the system compensates on every cycle. Treating the route as a control strip keeps correction small, predictable and easier to monitor.
Joint edges that are acceptable for occasional traffic can become reliability risks when crossings repeat continuously. If joint behaviour is the main driver, refer to joint performance in continuous picking centres for the common deterioration patterns.
Semi-automated routes often overlap with reach trucks and forklifts at transfers and staging. Braking and turning can amplify small level change into repeat vibration. For route-driven effects across truck types, see traffic effects on distribution centre floors.
Local level change often develops where loads dwell or repeat, especially near rack lines and narrow aisle travel. If you are seeing flatness change alongside load concentration, refer to floor load behaviour in high-bay distribution centres for the common control points.
If guidance routes are showing repeat vibration, tracking correction or local level change, we can review which control strips are governing performance and how to correct them without disrupting operations.
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