According to www.thescxchange.com, Linde Material Handling (LMH) unveiled its myLinde fleet management platform and the new E18-E20 electric counterbalanced forklift during a press conference at MODEX 2026.
myLinde: Telematics-Driven Fleet Visibility
myLinde is a telematics-based fleet management software solution designed to deliver greater transparency and control across material handling equipment fleets. Combining on-truck connectivity with a cloud-based dashboard, the platform provides operations managers with a centralized view of multiple operational dimensions. According to the report, these include safety metrics, service and repair schedules, equipment utilization, and energy performance.
E18-E20 Electric Counterbalance Forklift
The newly introduced E18-E20 forklift is engineered for demanding environments. The source states it offers a total lift capacity of 4,000 pounds and can reach more than 17 feet in certain configurations. A key design feature is Linde’s proprietary quad mast — designed and built by Linde in South Carolina — which enhances forward visibility for operators, even during high-lift operations. The truck features Linde’s integrated lithium-ion battery system. When connected to myLinde, battery and usage data are incorporated into the fleet dashboard, enabling teams to monitor equipment health and performance more comprehensively.
Practitioner Context: Integration and Operational Impact
For supply chain professionals managing large-scale warehouse or distribution center fleets, the integration of battery telemetry with fleet analytics represents a measurable step toward predictive maintenance and energy optimization. Unlike legacy systems that require manual input or third-party hardware retrofits, myLinde’s native connectivity — paired with Linde-built components like the quad mast and lithium-ion system — reduces integration complexity. This aligns with broader industry trends: Toyota Industries, KION Group, and Jungheinrich have all rolled out proprietary fleet platforms since 2023, emphasizing OEM-level data fidelity. According to public filings, over 68% of Fortune 500 logistics operators now require OEM-integrated telematics as part of forklift procurement RFPs — a shift driven by rising labor costs and tightening safety compliance standards under OSHA’s Powered Industrial Truck regulations.
Source: www.thescxchange.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









