Distilleries · NE Scotland

Telehandler Training for Distilleries

Accredited telehandler training built for distillery sites in NE Scotland. £500–£900 / day. Call 07867 933 018 for a free quote.

FAQs

Do you train outdoors year-round in North-East Scotland?
Yes — we plan the day around weather windows. NE Scotland conditions are exactly what your operators face anyway.
What's the lead time?
Most North-East Scotland bookings go in within 5–10 working days. Audit-deadline cover regularly lands inside a week.
Do you deliver telehandler on-site in North-East Scotland?
Yes — we travel to your yard or site in North-East Scotland. On-site delivery means the assessment is on your kit, not a generic test ground.
Will a principal accept this for a distillery site?
Yes — the certificate maps to the regs the principal's auditor cites, and we'll talk to the principal's HSE team directly if useful.
Will this satisfy our insurer?
Yes — the accredited certificate plus evidence pack is the standard underwriters accept for the operator-competence renewal question.

Why teams in North-East Scotland book this

Plant operator competence in North-East Scotland is mostly about evidence. Telehandler Training closes the gap between your operators' real-world ability and the certificate the auditor wants to see — without losing the operators for a week off-site.

Distilleries context: Speyside distilleries mix cask-yard FLT/telehandler work with confined-space stills, vapour zones and tight visitor flow.

Day rate band

£500–£900 / day

Regulations this covers

  • PUWER 1998
  • GMP
  • COSHH
  • DSEAR 2002 (alcohol vapour)

Typical machine mix: telehandler (cask handling) · forklift · MEWP for tun-room access · abrasive wheels for cooperage.

What the course covers

  • Boom control, load charts and stability
  • Attachment changes and lifting accessories
  • Travel with raised loads and uneven ground handling

Certification: Accredited telehandler operator certificate. Regs: LOLER 1998 and PUWER 1998.

Typical telehandler scenarios on North-East Scotland sites

  1. Scenario 1

    Lifting palletised blockwork to first-lift scaffold on a sloping plot

  2. Scenario 2

    Swapping bucket → forks → man-cage and re-checking the LOLER record

  3. Scenario 3

    Tele-handling round livestock or farm pedestrians without segregation

Audit findings this prevents

  • Operating outside the load chart because the boom angle was eyeballed
  • Forgetting that a man-cage requires a thorough examination every 6 months, not 12
  • Pulling away with a raised load on uneven ground — the top cause of tip-overs

Why this matters

30%

of UK construction plant fatalities involve telehandlers or excavators overturning.

Source: HSE construction fatal injuries report.

Related training pages

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Book a free site call

Tell us about your site and team — we'll plan the cohort around your operation.