Skip navigation View an alternate layout of this website with limited styles and no horizontal scrolling
Menu
Skip to Quick Links

Wheelchair Alternative Loader for Pickup Truck

Products are listed alphabetically.

Page 1 of 1

  1. LIFTAMI III Lift arm loads scooters into automobile trunks, vans, station wagons and hatchbacks. Vehicle installation involves bolting heavy duty base plate inside vehicle, and adjusting boom length and height to individual needs. The unit can be wired directly to auto battery or to scooter battery. Lifting is accomplished by an electric 12 volt screw actuator. Optional "C-Bar" lift arm allows scooters to be loaded without disassembly into mini vans, sport trucks or pickups. By removing seat and tiller, sco...[More Information]

  2. OUT-RIDER VEHICLE LIFT (MODEL PUL-1100) Picture of OUT-RIDER VEHICLE LIFT (MODEL PUL-1100) The Out-Rider Vehicle Lift, model PUL-1100, is a wheelchair loader for pickup trucks designed to lift and store fully assembled scooters and manual wheelchairs behind the driver's cab of a full-size, mid-size, or king cab pick-up truck. The wheelchair lift can be mounted on the truck just behind the cab on either the driver's side or the passenger's side. A "docking device" is attached to the wheelchair; different devices are used for standard wheelchairs and for wheelchair alternatives. For sta...[More Information]

Page 1 of 1

View discontinued Products (2)

AbleData, 8630 Fenton Street, Suite 930, Silver Spring, MD 20910. 1-800-227-0216.
Maintained for the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research of the U.S. Dept. of Education
by ICF Macro under Contract No. ED-04-CO-0018/0007.

The records in AbleData are provided for information purposes only. Neither the U.S. Department of Education nor ICF Macro has examined, reviewed, or tested any product, device, or information contained in AbleData. The Department and ICF Macro make no endorsement, representation, or warranty express or implied as to any product, device, or information set forth in AbleData. The views expressed on this site do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Department of Education, the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, or ICF Macro.