41 C.F.R. § 101-25.405   Materials handling equipment.


Title 41 - Public Contracts and Property Management


Title 41: Public Contracts and Property Management
PART 101–25—GENERAL
Subpart 101–25.4—Replacement Standards

Browse Previous

§ 101-25.405   Materials handling equipment.

(a) Materials handling equipment will not be replaced unless the estimated cost of necessary one-time repair or reconditioning of each piece of equipment exceeds, at lowest available cost, the applicable percentage of acquisition cost as shown in column 3 of the following table. Equipment eligible for replacement under the criteria established by this standard may be repaired provided the expected economical life is extended commensurate with the expenditure required. Prior to incurring repair costs for equipment eligible for replacement, consideration should be given to the continuing availability of repair parts.

(1) Years in use shall be determined in accordance with the following:

(i) An operating month is considered equal to 100 operating hours. For materials handling equipment in storage, one month in storage equals 50 hours of operation.

(ii) The number of years in use is determined by dividing the number of operating months by 12. The fractional years in use resulting from this computation will be rounded to the nearest full year.

 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------                                            Column     Column 3_Maximum allowable ``one-time repair limits'' as                                          2_Expected        percentage of acquisition costs (years in use)          Column 1_Type of unit            years of  -----------------------------------------------------------                                          economical                                              use      1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------                GasolineFork truck (2000 pounds to 6000 pounds).          8   50  45  40  30  25  20  15  10  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..Fork truck (over 6000 pounds)...........         10   50  45  40  35  30  25  20  15  10  10  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..Tractor.................................          8   50  45  40  30  25  20  15  10  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..Crane...................................         12   50  50  45  45  40  40  35  30  25  20  15  10  ..  ..  ..Platform truck..........................          8   50  45  40  30  25  20  15  10  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..Straddle truck..........................         15   50  50  50  45  45  45  40  40  35  35  30  25  20  15  10                ElectricFork truck (2000 pounds to 6000 pounds).         15   50  50  50  45  45  45  40  40  35  35  30  25  20  15  10Tractor.................................         15   50  50  50  45  45  45  40  40  35  35  30  25  20  15  10Crane...................................         15   50  50  50  45  45  45  40  40  35  35  30  25  20  15  10Platform truck..........................         15   50  50  50  45  45  45  40  40  35  35  30  25  20  15  10Pallet truck............................         15   50  50  50  45  45  45  40  40  35  35  30  25  20  15  10----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(2) In using the maximum allowable one-time repair limits in column 3 of the table, costs such as parts, labor, and transportation incident to the repairs, are to be included in computing one-time repair costs. However, operating expenses such as fuels and lubricants, replacement tires and batteries, and antifreeze will not be included in the one-time repair cost estimate.

(b) Notwithstanding the limitations prescribed in §101–25.405(a), materials handling equipment may be replaced under the following conditions provided a written justification supporting such replacement is approved by the agency head or an authorized designee. The justification shall be retained in the agency files.

(1) When the cumulative repair costs on a piece of equipment appears to be excessive as indicated by repair records. However, because an item of equipment accrues repair costs equal to the acquisition cost, it is not necessarily indicative of the current condition of the equipment. For example, a substantial repair expenditure included in the cumulative cost may actually have resulted in restoring the equipment to as good as new condition. While cumulative repair costs suggest an area for investigation, they should not be used as the principal ingredient in the repair/replacement decision making process.

(2) When repair parts are not available causing excessive equipment out-of-service time.

(3) When the equipment lacks essential features required in a particular task which is of a continuing nature and other suitable equipment is not readily available.

[32 FR 12400, Aug. 25, 1967]

Browse Previous


chanrobles.com