If you’ve ever watched a crew set up slab tables at dawn, you know the split-second when a tall prop wobbles before it’s braced. That’s exactly where a prop with tripod earns its keep. Horizon’s Tripod & Fork Head set doesn’t try to steal the spotlight; it just makes your pour day faster, calmer, and—frankly—safer.
Taller floor-to-floor heights, tighter schedules, and a skilled labor crunch have pushed contractors toward quick-erect shoring accessories. Fork heads matched with H20 beams are the go-to in many markets, and a robust prop with tripod setup stabilizes free-standing tables while you pin, level, and lock. Interestingly, procurement teams tell me they’re prioritizing components that are CE-marked and traceable—no more mystery steel.
| Component | Tripod (folding) | Fork Head |
| Material | Q235/Q345 steel | S235/S355 steel |
| Finish | Hot-dip galvanized or powder-coated | Zinc-plated |
| Compatibility | Prop OD 48–60 mm; quick-lock collar | H20 beams: single (longitudinal), double (lateral) |
| Load/Use | Stabilization up to ≈5.5 m prop height (site-dependent) | Static capacity ≈30–40 kN (system-dependent) |
| Weight | ≈10–12 kg | ≈3.5–5.0 kg |
Values based on factory tests; real-world use may vary with prop class and site practices.
- High and free‑standing slab tables before full bracing - Parking structures and malls with wide bays - Industrial plants where H20 beams dominate the soffit layout
The fork head’s dual-orientation slotting is clever: one H20 in the longitudinal side or two in the lateral side. Crews like the choice; fewer returns to the tool crib. And yes, a prop with tripod means fewer hand-holds on a swaying post—less drama at 5 meters.
From Hustpark Building No. 4, Zhongxing East Street, Xingtai, Hebei, China, Horizon offers RAL color matching, logo embossing, fork widths for timber or aluminum H-beams, and collars for 48.3/60.3 mm props. Lead times are sensible, to be honest, and packing is site-friendly.
| Vendor | Certs | Lead Time | Customization | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Horizon (Tripod & Fork Head) | ISO 9001, EN 1090 | ≈3–5 weeks | High (color, logo, sizes) | Strong H20 compatibility |
| Brand A (EU) | EN 1090, ISO 3834 | ≈2–4 weeks | Medium | Premium pricing |
| Brand B (APAC) | ISO 9001 | ≈4–6 weeks | Low | Budget-focused |
- Southeast Asia, 2,500 m² parking deck: crews reported ≈30% faster initial shoring thanks to quick-lock tripods; zero tilt incidents during pre-bracing phase.
- Central Europe, logistics hub: fork heads running double H20 laterally cut beam changes between bays; site QA recorded consistent bearing with
“Feels solid—no fiddly pins,” one foreman said. Another noted the finish holds up after rain and dust, which, honestly, is what you want when Wednesday turns muddy.
- Adjustable prop methodology: EN 1065
- Timber H20 beams: EN 13377
- CE for structural components: EN 1090 (FPC)
- Corrosion testing: ASTM B117
- Quality systems: ISO 9001
References:
1) EN 1065: Adjustable telescopic steel props for construction.
2) EN 13377: Timber formwork beams – Requirements.
3) EN 1090: Execution of steel structures and aluminum structures – FPC for CE marking.
4) ASTM B117: Standard Practice for Operating Salt Spray (Fog) Apparatus.
5) ISO 9001: Quality management systems – Requirements.