Long stamping dies are difficult to move safely when the shop depends on manual handling or ordinary forklift work. Heavy tools can shift, tip, or injure operators if the lifting path is not controlled.
Erack gives the shop a controlled storage position with integrated lifting support, so the next die can stay close to the press and be handled with less risk.
Main pain points
Stamping dies are often long, heavy, and awkward to move. When they are stored on the floor or in ordinary racks, workers face higher crush risk and the tooling is easier to damage.
- Manual handling increases injury risk
- Ordinary racks may not support long dies safely
- Forklift movement can create tipping hazards
- Floor storage makes the shop harder to control
Core value
Erack helps reduce handling risk by combining stable storage with local lifting support. That allows one operator to work with the die more safely and gives the shop a more controlled storage workflow.
It is a practical fit for plants that need a safer standard storage model for long and heavy stamping tooling.
Product features and parameters
Erack is a heavy-duty mold rack system designed for safe die storage and controlled access.
| Item | Specification |
|---|---|
| Product type | Heavy-duty mold rack |
| Use case | Stamping die storage and safe access |
| Handling | Overhead hoist / crane depending on layout |
| Goal | Lower injury risk and safer handling |
| Storage style | Drawer-style heavy mold storage |
Suitable scenarios
This setup fits metal forming plants that need to reduce crush risk and maintain a safer die storage flow.
- Stamping die rooms
- OSHA safety upgrades
- Heavy tooling control
- Single-operator lift workflows
Delivery method
Erack is supplied as a standard rack system that can be installed on site. Share the die size and the heaviest load, and a layout and quote can be prepared around that load.
Recommended products
Tell us your die size, expected quantity, and required delivery date. We will review the layout and send back a practical response.

