I guess I should have used a larger font when I first said OBVIOUSLY this will etc. All who have commented on the issues involved are 100% correct. Especially the last comment about where the steering wheels are on a forklift compared to a tractor. Vastly increased danger, much less (but not none, just very little) capacity, for sure, obvious even I thought, no argument here! My thinking was not to "pick and carry" a load, (cranes that are called pick and carry types are built much heavier and have comparatively little capacity due to the stress involved as compared to a static lift) but just a third hand for holding something up in the shop, while keeping the tractor a bit further away. While parked on a level concrete floor, most importantly with no side slope.
I had occasion a couple months ago to make use of this, I was taking one wing off my Rans S-7S kitplane, about 80-90 lbs., and needed a third hand but had no convenient pick point in the hangar ceiling. I ended up using a homebuilt drywall jack underneath, but holding it from above would have been better. The thing about it I like, is when in a constrained headroom situation, the forks and FEL could stay low, while by tilting back you could shoot a lifting hook strut up and over a load. MANY times when I am doing something, it'd be handy to be able to have a fixed "skyhook" a couple feet above the work, just something to hook a rope or chain to while you welded it etc. I have a beam trolley that runs the length of my shop, with two chain falls on it, but any loads need to be where it is, the center of the shop. This is one reason I opted for 48" forks instead of the 44", though well aware of the reduced capacity I would have with moving the leverage point further out, I was more interested in reaching light loads a bit further out. L3301, with a rear snowblower and windshield fluid filled tires BTW. Hey you guys are doing the right thing by critiquing me on this, much better then saying "yeah go for it, can't see anything at all that could go wrong with that setup!"
Nice work Asgard, another way to skin the cat! Another possible use I'd have for a fork based picker is when I lift my PTO mount weed sprayer up into the outbuilding upper shelf. I can ALMOST do it by hand, will I could have almost done it by hand 20 years ago, it's has things in the way when picking it from the bottom using the forks, easily breakable plastic things. Top picking it would be super easy, but I can't use the forks, with a chain dropped through a torched burned hole in the fork tip (the first thing I did when I got my forks) as I run out of headroom.