Conveyor Interface Flooring
Conveyor systems set the flow in many automotive plants, carrying bodies, pallets and sub assemblies between workstations. Floors must provide reliable support beneath conveyor legs and pits, keep walkways and access routes level, and manage joint positions so maintenance and materials movement remain smooth. This often combines engineered concrete slab construction, carefully chosen resurfacing and levelling systems and selected polished concrete finishes in walkways that link back into the wider automotive production plant flooring strategy.
20 +
Years
Working Around Conveyor Systems
Skid, pallet and chain conveyors introduce concentrated loads at leg positions, repeated vibration through frames and strict level requirements at transfer points. The floor acts as the foundation for this equipment and the routes around it, so slab behaviour, joint layout and surface finish all influence uptime, safety and ease of maintenance.
Article Focus
How Conveyor Systems Load and Use the Floor
Conveyor structures do not load the floor in the same way as open production areas. Loads are channelled through legs, rails and pits at defined intervals, with dynamic forces arising from starts, stops and accumulation of product. At the same time, operators, tuggers and forklifts move alongside and across these systems, relying on predictable levels and safe surface conditions when crossing under, over or around the line.
In plants where AGVs and tuggers feed conveyors, wheel paths and crossings must be detailed so that vehicle movement and conveyor supports do not fight for the same slab joints. Floors around these interfaces need enough stability to hold fixings accurately, maintain level control and allow easy cleaning in zones that naturally attract debris from carriers and product movement.
Key Floor Requirements for Conveyor Interfaces
Typical Floor Problems Around Conveyor Routes
When floors and conveyor systems are developed separately, the resulting misalignment can affect both equipment and day to day movement around the line.
Conveyor legs positioned close to slab joints, leading to edge cracking
Uneven levels at transfer points, causing product hang-ups or impact
Settled slabs beneath support frames, affecting chain tracking and alignment
Awkward steps or lips at crossings used by forklifts and tuggers
Surface wear or debris build up beneath return strands and sprocket zones
Restricted access for maintenance teams due to poor ramp and platform detailing
Our Process
STAGE 1
We walk the conveyor routes with your engineering and maintenance teams, reviewing support positions, transfer points and access paths. We identify where legs, pits and walkways intersect slab joints or historic repairs, and how nearby routes such as forklift wheel paths interact with crossings under or near the lines.
STAGE 2
We develop a floor scheme that supports leg locations, protects anchor zones and refines levels at transfers and crossings. This can include local levelling, joint relocation through infill and cut sequences, and surface adjustments on walkways and ramps. The aim is to provide a coherent base that suits both conveyor engineering needs and everyday movement around the equipment.
STAGE 3
Work is scheduled around shutdowns, conveyor modifications or model changes. We phase the improvements so critical routes remain available, coordinating with your project team to validate chain tracking, product transfer and access paths before areas return to full operation.
Positioning legs close to joints can accelerate damage. We consider where supports and slab breaks coincide and adjust detailing so forces are carried by stable concrete rather than fragile edges.
Product transfers rely on tight level control. Floors around end rollers and transfer points are refined so small dips or rises do not cause impacts, jams or tracking issues.
Crossings for operators, tuggers and forklifts are detailed to minimise steps and lips, reducing strain, jolts and disruption as people and vehicles move alongside conveyor lines.
Areas beneath and beside conveyors are configured to support clean-down methods, helping prevent build up of packaging fragments, dust or product residues in hard to reach pockets.
If conveyor supports, transfers or crossings are causing recurring floor issues, a focused review of slab behaviour and interface detailing can unlock practical improvements.
Contact us to outline your conveyor layouts, upgrade plans and operational constraints:
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FAQ