
Hurricane prep for equipment fleets in Florida: what our yard does every June
A practical hurricane-season checklist for Florida equipment owners — from fuel reserves to post-storm deployment.
June 1 marks the start of Atlantic hurricane season, and every Florida equipment owner should have a plan that goes beyond “park it on high ground.” At our Hilliard yard, we run a checklist every May that covers fuel, fluid levels, battery condition, and staging protocol. Machines listed on https://equipmentsupplyservice.com are stored with these preparations already in place.

Fuel and fluids: full tanks before the forecast
When a storm threatens, fuel becomes scarce fast. We keep diesel tanks topped off for all yard inventory starting in June. A full fuel tank also prevents condensation inside the tank — a common issue when machines sit during evacuations. Hydraulic fluid, engine oil, and coolant should all be at proper levels. If a machine needs an oil change within 50 hours, do it before the storm — you may be running that machine hard for debris clearing with no access to a parts store for days.
Battery and electrical
Dead batteries after a storm are one of the most common fleet problems. If a machine sits for a week during evacuation and prep, a marginal battery will die. We load-test every battery in May and replace anything that tests below 80% capacity. Solar trickle chargers on the yard help, but the only real solution is good batteries. Mark the install date on every battery with a paint pen — if it is more than three years old, replace it proactively.
Post-storm deployment
After a hurricane, the first 72 hours create enormous demand for equipment — loaders for debris, excavators for drainage, and skid steers for residential cleanup. If your machines are prepared and operational, you can mobilize immediately while competitors are still jump-starting dead equipment. We have seen storms turn into significant business opportunities for prepared operators. Browse equipment at https://equipmentsupplyservice.com before the season — pre-storm pricing beats post-storm scarcity pricing every time.
Permalink: https://equipmentsupplyservice.com /blog/florida-hurricane-season-equipment-prep
More in Operations
Operations2025-10-21 · ~9 min
Heat, humidity, and coolant systems: the boring failures that strand crews
Blown hoses and weak fans do not make for sexy blog titles—they make for tow bills. Here is what we watch on yard prep.
Continue reading
Operations2025-07-08 · ~14 min
Tier 4 interim/final, DPF, and DEF: what used buyers should budget beyond the payment
Emissions hardware is not moral—it is maintenance. Here is the line items we see bite fleets when they chase low auction prices.
Continue reading
Operations2025-06-04
Financing and shipping: how we quote lanes from Hilliard without drama
From permit reality to load securement—what we include when we talk dollars and dates.
Continue reading