Choosing between cantilever racks and pallet racks is one of the most critical decisions for warehouse managers handling heavy, long, or oversized materials. This comprehensive guide breaks down the key differences to help you make the right investment.
A cantilever rack features arms extending from a central column, creating open-front storage without vertical obstructions. This design is specifically engineered for long, heavy, and irregularly shaped items — steel pipes, lumber, sheet metal, furniture, and industrial profiles.
Telescopic cantilever racks, like the Tcrack TC Series, take this further with roll-out arms that allow overhead crane direct access, eliminating forklift dependency entirely.
Pallet racks use horizontal beams between vertical uprights to store palletized goods. They’re the standard for boxed, packaged, or uniform-sized inventory in distribution centers and retail warehouses.
| Feature | Cantilever Rack | Pallet Rack |
|---|---|---|
| Best For | Long, heavy, irregular items | Palletized, uniform boxes |
| Access Method | Overhead crane / forklift | Forklift only |
| Load per Level | Up to 5 tons (TC Series) | 1-2 tons typical |
| Aisle Width | Narrow (crane access) | Wide (forklift turning) |
| Space Efficiency | 50% more storage | Standard |
| Retrieval Time | ~2 min (telescopic) | ~5-10 min |
If your warehouse handles steel plates, pipes, aluminum profiles, wood panels, or any material longer than 3 meters, telescopic cantilever racks deliver unmatched efficiency. The Tcrack TE Series offers adjustable arm spacing for mixed-size inventory, while the TC Series handles the heaviest loads.
Pallet racks are the workhorse of standard warehousing. But for heavy industrial materials, cantilever racks — especially telescopic systems with crane access — deliver 85% faster retrieval and 50% better space utilization. The upfront investment pays for itself within 12-18 months through operational savings.
Need help choosing the right rack system?