Masonry Magazine February 1979 Page. 2
More than an elevating scaffolding,
MORGEN (and only MORGEN) is a complete scaffolding system for maximum profits
Flat bed trailer carrying pallet arrives with 32 assembled towers-enough to scaffold 232½ lineal feet of wall 20½ feet high.
Fork lift truck with Morgen fork lift bracket unloads trailer, sets up pairs of towers along the wall.
Another wall quickly goes up with no interruption to the masons. The scaffolding is moved intact until all walls on the job site are completed.
That wall completed, the fork lift truck with bracket moves intact pairs of towers and 16-foot planks to another wall in one-fourth the time it would take to tear down and erect conventional scaffolding. Moving the planks is not a separate operation.
Towers are leveled, braced and platforms stocked. Laborers winch the carriages up as work progresses. With no interruption, masons production averages 20% greater than on conventional scaffolding.
See us at the MCAA Show. Then the fork lift lowers the towers and holds them while bracing is removed. It places four towers at a time on the pallet.
The trailer takes off for the next job. The scaffolding can be left on the pallet between jobs, saving one cycle of loading and unloading.
MORGEN MANUFACTURING CO. Box 160 Yankton, SD 57078