Finesse with backhoe-loader sends local man to Las Vegas to compete for backhoe-loader title

When Dennis Drake goes to work on his backhoe-loader, it is not typically on a carpeted indoor floor before nearly 1,000 spectators.

These were the work conditions Drake faced on March 11 in Las Vegas when he competed in the final round of the Case North American Rodeo Series Loader Backhoe Championship.

“You can hear the crowd just clear as day when you are trying to concentrate on what you are doing,” said Drake, a 27-year-old Charleston resident.

Drake was one of 5,000 backhoe-loader operators from the United States and Canada who competed in qualifying events for Case Construction’s March 10-11 rodeo. Less than 80 of them qualified. Drake placed first amongst the five finalists who made it through the rodeo’s opening rounds and he placed fifth in the final round.

Although the final round was disappointing, Drake said he was honored to make it so far from in a field of so many other backhoe-loader operators.

“I have always dreamed about a national competition to see how I would rate,” Drake said.

Drake said he has had a tremendous passion for backhoe-loaders ever since his father, Steve Drake, put him on one at age 7. He has worked full-time as an backhoe-loader operator for 11 years now. He is an operator and foreman for Drake Homes of Charleston, and has an excavating business of his own.

The versatility of backhoe-loaders and their many moving parts appeals to him, Drake said. He explained they can turn earth for septic systems, water and sewer lines, foundations and many other projects.

“I eat breath and sleep it,” Drake said. “I have a true passion for it. To a lot of guys, it is just their job.”

Drake said he heard Case was putting on a rodeo to celebrate the 50th anniversary of its first fully integrated backhoe-loader, so he entered a qualifying competition last summer in Indianapolis.

After qualifying, Drake went to the rodeo with the sponsorship of Birkey’s Construction Equipment of Mattoon. The grand prize in the rodeo was a new backhoe-loader valued at $120,000.

Competitors at the rodeo in Las Vegas had to maneuver approximately 18,000 pound backhoe-loaders around narrow obstacles made of PVC pipes. They had to pick up, move and drop off red soccer balls and other items within these obstacles.

Drake said the goal was to successfully complete the assigned tasks in the shortest amount of time. He said 30 seconds were added to the final score if a ball was knocked off its pedestal, 90 seconds were added if the backhoe-loader’s scoop touched the ground, and 300 seconds were added if the drop-off container was missed.

“I will tell you what. You want to talk about a lot of pressure,” Drake said. “I have never been so nervous in my life.”

Drake’s fiancee, Laci Wilson, and several others were there to cheer for him. They shared anxious moments as Drake slowly, but surely used the heavy equipment within the narrow confines of the obstacles.

“It was nerve-racking and very intense,” Wilson said.

The finals began with the five competitors on stands Olympic fashion, with Drake occupying the highest stand due to his first-place finish in the opening rounds. Pictures of the five finalists were placed on a poster that was distributed during the rodeo. The competitions took place before a large crowd at the Las Vegas Country Club.

“I have never had an audience that big. It was a first class set up they on. They gave us a lot of good recognition,” Drake said.

http://www.jg-tc.com/articles/2008/03/20/news/doc47e3139

Backhoe loader - Construction Equipment Bay.com

The backhoe loader is one of the most common pieces of heavy equipment on any size job site. The fact that it features two useful tools in one machine makes the backhoe loader a must-have for all kinds of construction and repair projects.

The standard backhoe consists of a diesel-powered, four-wheeled vehicle with the operator’s cab in the middle and a tool on each end. On the front, it has a loader: a wide bucket on dual arms that is used to either pick up loose piles of material or to push dirt back into a hole when a job is finished. The rear end has a backhoe — a hydraulic-powered digging scoop on a three-jointed arm, designed to dig through hard earth. The operator needs only to turn around in his seat to switch from digging a hole to filling it back up.

Digging and refilling holes and trenches is commonly required for all kinds of construction, utility work, and landscaping.Aggregate Screen Equipment The ability to exchange the backhoe or loader bucket for a different attachment gives you even more flexibility: crushers, retractable-bottom buckets, grinders, and other tools can handle a variety of other tasks. The combination of power, relatively small size, two common tools, and flexibility makes backhoe loaders extremely useful for contractors and construction firms of many types.

This BuyerZone Backhoe Loaders Buyer’s Guide will explain what you should look for when choosing a backhoe loader, what features to expect, and how much you can expect to pay.

Part of backhoe loaders’ popularity is based on the fact that they fall in the middle of a range of digging and loading equipment, bringing more power than compact machines without the expense of full-sized excavators. You should consider whether a backhoe loader is the right choice for the bulk of your digging and earthmoving needs.

Used Mini Excavator For SaleFor smaller jobs and increased flexibility, the combination of a skid steer loader with a standard bucket and a mini excavator can sometimes work faster than a backhoe loader. It can be cheaper to buy the two smaller machines than one backhoe loader, but you’ll need an operator for each one and you’ll have more transportation and maintenance hassles. These mini machines are most valuable in very crowded conditions, and recent trends have many contractors replacing at least one backhoe with a mini excavator.

For high-end digging power, full sized excavators are the best choice. These massive tracked machines are only worthwhile if your application calls for ongoing digging: building foundations, for example. However, their size makes them less useful on cramped construction sites.

Backhoe loaders fill a very important middle ground, where having an excavator and loading bucket on one relatively compact machine is essential. They’re also much better at moving around large job sites or between sites — you can drive a backhoe on the road if need be, while excavators and skid steers have to be moved on trailers.

http://www.machineryjunction.com/blog/backhoe-loader-construction

New & used backhoe loader pricing

Buying a backhoe loader involves more than just choosing a model: you’ll have to evaluate several backhoe dealers to find one you can work with for the long term. Like any piece of heavy-duty construction equipment, your backhoe loader will wear and eventually break, making your relationship with the dealer important for preventative maintenance and repairs.

Major pieces of construction equipment like backhoe loaders don’t come cheap: they’re built for reliability and toughness. Before you develop a case of sticker shock, consider that you’ll be using your new backhoe loader for 10 years or more, and the upfront cost won’t seem quite as high.

Typical prices for a base-model 14′ digging depth backhoe, the industry standard, with an average 80 or 90 horsepower (hp), range from $55,000 to $75,000. 15′ to 16′ models go for $75,000 to $90,000, and those over 16′ can average around $110,000. Compact backhoes in the popular 9′ to 10′ range are most often in the $25,000 to $35,000 range.

Options like four-wheel drive, automatic transmission, and sideshift can quickly raise your total costs — but if those options are important to your planned use of the machine, they’ll pay for themselves in improved efficiency. Also count on paying an extra $1,000 to $2,000 for each specialized attachment you purchase like a 4 in 1 bucket or crusher.

Dealers often offer subsidized financing from the equipment manufacturers, helping you get a good deal on purchase financing. Leasing is a good option when interest rates are high, but while interest rates are relatively low, you’re better off purchasing outright.

Backhoe loaders can also be rented by the day, week, or month. Daily rates range from $150 to $500; weekly rentals are typically $600 to $1,500; and monthly rentals average around $2,000 to $3,000.

Buying used backhoe loaders
Due to these steep prices, you may want to investigate used backhoe loaders. Take into account your schedule flexibility when deciding whether or not to buy used. If you lose the use of the backhoe for a week due to repairs, will that throw off your schedule completely, or can you take it in stride? You should also ensure that you’re buying from a reputable dealer, as you’re more likely to need their help for repairs.

Prices drop considerably once the machines have a few thousand hours of use on them. For example, used backhoe loaders with 14′ backhoes and 2,000 hours of use can be found for around $30,000. Choose a machine with even more hours and you can drive the price down even further.

However, you’ll need to be careful about maintenance costs. A few dings and some peeling paint might not matter to you, but a failing transmission certainly will. Make sure you take the loader for a test drive and do some loading and digging with it to gauge its performance.

http://www.machineryjunction.com/blog/new-used-backhoe-loader

Hard Surfacing: What Is It, and

You’ve heard them before…, “Bulldozers, Graders, Excavators, Backhoe. Words like these conjure up images of toughness and invincibility…, of endurance and cold hard steel. Without seeing it for yourself, you wouldn’t guess that massive machines would wear away from moving a bit of dirt around. After all, these are the tools that we use to move mountains, dam rivers, and level hundreds of acres at a time, right?

All true, but moving large amounts of material doesn’t mean that there isn’t a cost. Given enough time, even hardened steel wears away. The abrasiveness of that material, whether it’s soft loam, loose sand or hard rock, will determine the speed at which your blades, buckets, and rakers will erode, but erode they will. Sometimes at an alarming rate, and operation-killing costs.

The way this problem is solved: Before a blade, bucket, tooth, or other object is used for the first time, welders are brought in and they lay down beads of very hard welding rod. These rods are special alloys that contain metals like manganese, molybdenum, and chrome. Each manufacture makes them with a range of properties, including:

* Hardness (loamy soil only needs resistance to wear. but rocks require resistance to breakage AND wear)
* Strikability from any angle (some rods flow better when welding upside down)
* Penetration (or depth into the base metal)
* Machinability (some hard surfacing needs to be machined, or shaped, after being laid down)
* Slag Peeling (a cost saving measure – the welding slag doesn’t have to be chipped afterward)
* Pilability (some rods pile high, while others flow out flat against the base metal)

You may have seen hard surfacing before - it’s usually laid down in cross-hatch patterns. However, welding hundreds of yards of rod is tedious, so you sometimes see that more creative welders will make all sorts of patterns and designs, in order to keep their day from getting too boring. The point is to build up the hard surface on all areas that will contact the material, and to have it thick enough that it takes the main force of whatever is being pushed, dug, or cut.

How often this needs to be re-done depends on the material being rubbed across the hard surfacing, and the amount of time spent playing in the dirt. In bad conditions, it may need doing several times a season. One thing is certain though, if a contact surface isn’t hard surfaced, you’ll be buying a new blade, bucket, etc., before very much time has passed.

http://www.heavyequipmentschool.com/?cat=5

Backhoe Training For A New Millennium

Can you operate a backhoe? If not, why not learn?
Associated Training Services is the largest heavy equipment training school online. You can get a certification to operate the biggest, baddest heavy equipment on the planet, including backhoes, dump trucks, loaders, graders, and coming soon: Cranes! You’ll be the envy the dirt movers when you strut your stuff on top of the biggest heavy equipment in the construction industry. You’ll be the backhoe king.

ATS offers three levels of training for all equipment. The backhoe training includes:

* Introduction to Blueprints and Heavy Equipment, Trade Orientation, Safety, and Basic Rigging and Operational Techniques
* Scrapers, Rollers, Bulldozers, Graders, Earth Moving Basics, and Civil Blueprint Reading
* Soils, Excavators, Motor Graders, Heavy Equipment Operator Leadership, Grading and Finishing, and Advanced Operational Techniques

Learn everything there is to know about operating a backhoe and get a job in the construction industry. Work your way to the top!

You’ll more than you’ll ever want to know about backhoes, tractors, graders, loaders, dump trucks, and all the heavy equipment. Learn more about heavy equipment training programs right now.

http://www.heavyequipmentschool.com/?cat=5

Yanmar’s CBL40 Compact Backhoe Loader Earns

Yanmar, a company that soon will celebrate 100 years in business, is betting that the compact dimensions, versatility and performance of its new CBL40 will appeal to buyers who find full-size backhoe-loaders frequently too big for the job, or who are looking for a bit more application flexibility than even big skid-steers or compact wheel loaders can provide. The CBL40 is, at heart, a sturdy backhoe-loader. But with a universal coupler up front, and with a backhoe that can be removed to allow using attachments with the machine’s optional three-point hitch or PTO shaft, the CBL40’s potential is significantly expanded.

Construction Equipment had the opportunity for a close look at the design and performance of the new Yanmar in mid-May, when the company loaned us a CBL40 that was on a demonstration tour in northern Illinois. We, in turn, placed the machine in the capable hands of Frank Bogden, an instructor/operator at Local 150’s (International Union of Operating Engineers) Apprenticeship and Skill Improvement facility in Plainfield, Ill.

Bogden used the machine to trench in some tough rocky fill, backfilled the cut, loaded trucks with crushed limestone, took the CBL40 on a couple of load-and-carry runs, then switched the bucket for a set of forks to handle lengths of 8-inch ductile iron pipe. He and Local 150 instructor/technician Dale Brown then separated the machine from its backhoe (in the field) to check the difficulty of doing so and, in the process, gave us a look at the optional category-1, three-point hitch installation and the optional PTO.

Overall, Bogden spoke highly of the CBL40’s design and performance, but did have a number of suggestions for making the machine more accommodating and useful from the operator’s point of view. Judging from the way several visitors from Yanmar listened and took notes during the evaluation, however, we’d guess that most of Bogden’s suggestions soon will be incorporated.

On site from Yanmar to give us a walk-around introduction to the machine and to answer questions were Takayuki Fujiwara, marketing manager; Bill Gearhart, assistant marketing and product manager; and Lee Haack, regional sales manager.

Quick CBL40 design tour
Even though Yanmar has deep roots in the agricultural business, the company strongly makes the point that the CBL40 is not a converted farm tractor. It is, says Yanmar, a machine designed exclusively for the construction industry, and one that builds on the structural durability of the company’s wheel loaders and on the hydraulic sophistication of its compact excavators.

The backbone of the new machine is an integral, one-piece frame designed to handle digging and loading forces at either end. A three-cylinder, turbocharged Yanmar diesel engine, generating 35.4 net horsepower, drives a closed-loop, load-sensing, two-speed “hydro-mechanical” propel system that, in turn, powers a mechanical gearbox that delivers its output to the conventional front and rear axles via drive shafts. An in-cab control disconnects the front axle for sustained high-speed travel.

The machine’s implement hydraulic system, which draws oil from a reservoir separate from the drive system, employs two, variable-displacement, axial-piston pumps. A lever in the cab’s right console switches the configuration of the hydraulic system between loader and backhoe operation, and in the backhoe position, ensures constant speed for the digging arm when another function is also engaged.

At the loader end, the CBL40 is fitted with a 70-inch-wide general-purpose bucket, but a universal-style quick coupler allows the use of size-appropriate skid-steer-loader attachments. Piping for auxiliary hydraulics to the front (as well as to the backhoe) is optional, but the auxiliary valve sections are already in place. The loader mechanism uses slab-steel lift arms and a geometry that allows parallel lift and automatic self-leveling.

Working the CBL40
The CBL40 has a swing-around seat (not a flip-over type) for switching from the loader to the backhoe position. Backhoe controls are two mechanical (not pilot operated) joysticks that can be configured in either a backhoe or excavator pattern by switching pin positions in the linkage at the main valve. The linkage is easily accessible through a panel at the rear of the operator’s compartment and, says Yanmar, changing patterns is accomplished in just a few minutes.

When we asked Bogden which pattern he preferred, he said that either would be fine, and he went to work trenching in the wet, cobble-laced clay at the site.

After this exercise, he had a few suggestions for Yanmar. First, give the seat vertical-adjustment capability. The seat is comfortable enough, Bogden said, but some operators prefer to sit higher. Also, make provisions for pinning the outrigger pads in place, because they sometimes flipped from the dirt side to the smooth-pavement side during repositioning, requiring him to exit the cab to remedy the problem. And another helpful change, he suggested, would be a backhoe lock that’s easier to manipulate from the seat, because the lock’s present configuration requires the operator to lean well forward from the backhoe position to reach the handle.

Aside from these observations, Bogden was quite complimentary about the CBL40’s backhoe performance, especially its hydraulics.

“Plenty of power and very responsive. The system does a good job of allowing you to simultaneously arm in and boom up. The controls have a good, smooth feel. I was concerned at first that since the machine has a hydrostatic-type drive, it would be difficult to reposition, but it rolled easily when I pushed back.”

Bogden particularly liked the good visibility into the trench — the result, he said, of Yanmar’s keeping the backhoe’s boom narrow.

Although Bogden said he didn’t have that much experience with hydrostatic-drive machines, he liked the way the CBL40 pushed strongly into the spoil when backfilling the trench. But what the machine could really use, he said, is a simple “bucket-level” indicator somewhere on the loader linkage.

After making a number of short-cycle passes between the crushed-limestone stockpile and a small truck, he commented favorably on the machine’s speed and its hydraulic capability when handling heavy material. Also noted were the CBL40’s good dump height and reach — “enough reach to easily place loads in the center of the truck.” Also, he said, he liked the machine’s controllability when approaching the truck.

With the bucket full of crushed rock, Bogden took the CBL40 on several circuitous routes to test its load-and-carry capability.

“The machine handles well — it feels very stable, and the turning radius is tight, which makes it very maneuverable. Although I didn’t take the machine into any really rough areas, the ride quality seemed fine, and the steering and brakes were responsive — no objections there.”

As a final exercise, Bogden swapped the bucket for a set of pallet forks, took the machine through some moderately sloppy ground to reach the pipe stockpile, then loaded and maneuvered with long sections of pipe.

“I was impressed with the good visibility to the load,” he said. “Granted, the loads we were handling probably weren’t much of challenge, but the machine seems to have plenty of lifting power, and the hydraulics, again, are quite smooth. And the parallel-lift feature is always a plus.”

We also had in mind to use the CBL40 to do craning with the backhoe, but Bogden noted that the machine had no lifting eye on the bucket. He suggested that the addition of that item would be a handy feature — which would encourage operators to rig loads in a safe manner.

So, Frank, any final thoughts about this compact Yanmar?
“I think, overall, it would be a very handy piece of equipment for a contractor. It has a lot of versatility built in, especially with the three-point hitch. It’s a good ‘multi-tasker’ — a well-thought-out machine.”

When we asked product manager Scott Owyen at Terex to list what he considered to be significant recent technical advances in backhoe-loader design, he placed the Tier-II engine at the top.

Backhoe-loader buyers may well overlook the Tier-II engine’s contribution to the machine’s overall refinement, and that’s understandable. The engine’s use, after all, has been legislated, not developed primarily to make backhoes more valuable to the user. But as it turns out, these environmentally friendly engines, which are running with fairly stringent standards for nitrogen-oxide and particulate-matter emissions, actually deliver practical benefits.

Says Owyen of the Tier-II Perkins engines in Terex backhoes: “We’re finding that these engines have increased horsepower, more torque, better fuel economy, lower sound levels and, of course, reduced emissions. Plus, maintenance intervals have been extended.”

On the fuel-economy issue, CE field tests of Tier-II-compliant machines (of all sorts) have turned up fuel-efficiency improvements (the amount of material moved per gallon of fuel) ranging from 5 to 30 percent. For example, in a recent CE field test of a JCB New Generation 214 backhoe-loader against its predecessor model, the new machine averaged 10 percent better fuel-efficiency when trenching in moderately difficult conditions.

Fuel is not a big concern for every backhoe user, of course, as long as the machine gets through the workday without a visit from the fuel truck. Many users, however, are acutely aware of rising operating costs and are looking for every penny they can save. For this group, the apparent efficiency of Tier-II engines, coupled with their generally longer service intervals, may yield significant savings.

Pilot controls

Every backhoe operator has a favorite control system, whether a two-lever arrangement with the boom on the left and the dipper on the right (or vice versa), a three-lever system with foot swing or a four-lever setup. What these systems have in common is mechanical linkage that connects the levers to the backhoe’s control valve.

If it’s been a while since you’ve looked at new backhoe, however, you’ll find that the majority of manufacturers have added a new system to the mix-pilot controls. These new controls, which may be available for all or just select models in a manufacturers line, typically take the form of joystick controllers mounted in consoles adjacent to the seat.

When you move the joysticks, you’re not pushing and pulling rods and bellcranks, but instead, simply shifting spools within a small hydraulic “pilot valve” at the base of the levers. Oil flow from the pilot valve is directed to the ends of the spools in the main valve, thus supplying the effort to shift the spools.

The advantages of pilot controls, say manufacturers, include considerably reduced lever effort, a more comfortable operating position (less leaning forward in the seat), and a better view into the trench, since the lever console at the operator’s feet is eliminated. And, more often that not, pilot-control systems have a lever or switch that allows operators instantly to configure controls to their liking by switching the boom and arm functions side-for-side.

Yes, some operators object to pilot controls, saying that they jeopardize the “feel” of the backhoe-that is, the ability to sense through the control levers what the bucket is encountering in the trench. Perhaps it’s just a matter of becoming accustomed to the slightly different inputs that new system delivers to the operator’s hands.

Hydraulic choices The issue of backhoe “feel,” of course, also extends to basic hydraulic systems. Some operators swear that the widely used open-center system is best in this regard. “Open-center” means simply that the control valve is always open to receive all the oil flow that one or more fixed-displacement gear pumps can deliver. If the oil isn’t needed, it returns to the reservoir.

Open-center systems, say operators who love them, not only clearly communicate what the bucket is doing in the trench, but also are particularly responsive, since the system’s full volume of oil flow is, potentially, always available to satisfy hydraulic demands. Manufacturers using these systems claim further advantages, namely, the use of less expensive, more forgiving (of contamination) gear pumps, overall design simplicity and simpler, less expensive repair.

On the other side of the fence, so to speak, are operators who favor closed-center hydraulic systems. These systems typically use a variable-displacement, axial-piston pump that works with the control valve to produce only the volume of oil that’s actually needed for the task at hand. Because the pump can regulate its output independently of engine speed, and because the system has the ability to sense loads in the various hydraulic circuits, the pump continually and automatically adjusts output volume for peak efficiency.

John Deere uses both open- and closed-center systems in its backhoe range, with the latter system fitted to the larger 410G and 710G models.

“The systems on the larger units allow more precise combined-function metering,” says Bob Tyler, product marketing manager for Deere’s backhoe line. “The cost goes up, of course, and according to some, the ‘feel’ goes down. But the system provides definite advantages: flow goes where it’s needed, not where the machine chooses to send it, and it saves fuel. And, I’ll add that I’ve never heard the ‘lack-of-feel’ complaint from a customer.”

Like Deere, Volvo also uses both system types¡ªan open-center in its BL60 model, and a closed-center in the larger BL70. According to product specialist Bill Sauber, however, the BL60 has “flow-sharing” ability built into the valve, a feature that automatically maintains pressure and flow for each function and enhances multi-function operation.

Terex uses what might be called a hybrid system, closed-center in design, but employing twin gear pumps. According to the company, the system essentially combines elements and benefits of both the conventional open- and closed-center designs, including load-sensing capability and the ability to smoothly blend multiple functions.

Truth be told, you’ll find it difficult to go wrong with any of the hydraulic systems offered on today’s selection of backhoes. Some buyers may be swayed one way or the other, however, based on their perception of a particular system’s value in their specific applications.

Couplers and comfort
Case’s Rusty Schaefer notes that backhoe buyers increasingly are specifying couplers for new machines to increase utility. Case, as do many backhoe builders, offers both a mechanical and hydraulic coupler for both ends of the machine. In addition, says Schaefer, Case offers an optional “integrated” hydraulic coupler on its 580 and 590 Super M models. As an integral part of the dipperstick, the coupler is designed to eliminate attachment offsets, to add no weight and to preserve digging forces.

Komatsu’s Mike Oliver also sees more buyers opting for couplers as they look for ways to make their machine investment more productive. He sees multi-purpose buckets as the leading front attachment, followed by forks and brooms. On the backhoe end, says Oliver, different-width buckets, hydraulic hammers, compaction wheels and plate compactors are popular tools.

Says Terex’s Owyen: “Even rental yards are now ordering machines with couplers and attachments.”

A final refinement that’s most noteworthy on today’s backhoes is the comfort and convenience of the operator’s environment. Cabs are larger, have more glass, and interior appointments are automotive-like. Available features such as pilot controls, suspension seats, ride-control and climate-control make long days not feel so long. And the wider availability of powershift and auto-shift transmissions makes the ride even more pleasant.

“Today, productivity is taking the direction of operator comfort,” says Deere’s Tyler. “Comfortable operators stay in the seat longer and get more done.”

http://www.machinerystock.com/article_details.php

Backhoe Bucket

When Curt Maas clamped an immense log — about 18 feet long and 20 inches in diameter — between the backhoe bucket and the hydraulic thumb of a new Cat 420E IT, we had just the fleeting thought that maybe he was kidding. The log seemed to us an impossible load for the machine. But the new Caterpillar made the lift, swung side-to-side with the log in an iron grip, and all the while, as far as we could tell, remained completely stable.

Maas, a test operator at Caterpillar’s Peoria (Ill.) Proving Ground (PPG), spent a couple of days withConstruction Equipmentthis past November, along with fellow operator Norm Miller, demonstrating the capabilities and features of the new 420E IT as representative of the company’s new E-Series backhoe-loader range. The lineup includes the 416E, 420E and 430E — with the latter two models also available with an integrated-tool-carrier (IT) front end. Standard digging depths are, respectively, 14.3, 14.3 and 15.4 feet.

The E-Series models, which replace the D-Series machines launched in late 2000, have quite a long list of design changes, compared with their predecessors and, according to Caterpillar, are also more productive at basic earthmoving tasks. The company put numbers to these stated productivity increases by sharing withCEthe results of a recent PPG comparison between the 420E IT and its 420D IT predecessor.

During our visit to PPG, operators Maas and Miller, along with the PPG backhoe-loader evaluation staff — Brad Holsapple, Gerry Stewart, Nick Krueger and Elizabeth Baldwin — demonstrated the methodology Caterpillar employs in its comparative testing. They arranged for us to observe the machines running side-by-side in trenching and truck-loading operations, while Krueger and Baldwin electronically recorded machine performance.

The electronic test-data-collection system the company uses is a computer-based process that allows every cycle of a test machine to be divided into its primary segments for later analysis. During the trenching comparison, for example, times are recorded for digging, swinging/dumping and returning, as well as for time spent repositioning.

To complement this look at the comparative performance of the new model and its predecessor, senior project engineer Jim Joy, from Caterpillar’s Building Construction Products Division in Clayton, N.C., met us at the Peoria Proving Ground to explain the details of the new E-Series design.

Structures, sticks and thumbs

Structurally, the design enhancements of the E-Series, compared with the D-Series, go right to the very backbone of the new machines — the mainframe, which has been modified significantly in four key areas: loader tower, front and rear axle mounts and swing post. According to Caterpillar, these mainframe changes further complement the already-high-strength design of D-Series models. Structural changes at the loader end of the machine include boom arms with a beefier box-section and a heavier torque tube that provides added rigidity to the assembly.

At the backhoe end, the boom has been modified, says Caterpillar, to reduce stress points in heavy-duty applications. Specific changes include one-piece side plates, versus fabricated side plates, larger mounting pins, and the addition of a replaceable wear pad to protect the boom underside from contact with work tools. Another significant change involves the boom nose, which has been reconfigured and strengthened to accommodate a new extendible stick. The boom lock has been redesigned, too, not only to keep the backhoe tighter during transport, but also to more effectively handle the stress of lifting with the stick when the boom is in its locked position.

The new extendible stick is a significant development for the E-Series, says Joy, and has been designed with an “outside slider” configuration. This means, he says, that the outer structure of the stick extends by sliding over a stationary inner structure. By comparison, the D-Series extendible stick pushed out an inner structure from within a stationary outer structure. And to maintain proper fit between the two sections, the new extendible stick incorporates a redesigned system of greaseless wear pads that can be adjusted in about 30 minutes, according to Caterpillar, compared with two hours on D-Series models.

Two rows of serrated gripping teeth on the bottom surface of the new extendible stick’s sliding section allow the operator to clamp material securely between the bucket and the stick without risking damage to the stick. But as handy as the gripping teeth might be, they can’t match the heavy-duty clamping power and dexterity of an E-Series extendible stick equipped with a hydraulic thumb.

Although the thumb is optional, all E-Series backhoe sticks, whether extendible or standard, are fitted with thumb and thumb-cylinder mounts to allow bolting on the attachment. (The D-Series could use a thumb only with a standard stick.) A thumb-plumbing kit allows quick installation of the attachment, a process facilitated if the machine is equipped with a six-function main valve from the factory.

Stronger hydraulics

In concept, the design of the closed-center, load-sensing, 43-gpm hydraulic system used in the E-Series is essentially the same as that for the D-Series. But, that said, the E-Series incorporates a number of refinements, among them an increase in main-relief pressure to 3,600 psi, up from 3,300 psi in the D-Series.

While the pressure increase results in more available hydraulic horsepower at both the backhoe and loader ends, the new hydraulic system also incorporates features that contribute to easier operation. New thumb wheels near the top of the backhoe joysticks, for example, allow easy control of auxiliary functions — such as the extendible stick and thumb. These controllers replace floor-mounted pedals in D-Series machines and are designed to provide low-effort, precise, proportional control of auxiliary functions — while also providing more foot room for the operator.

Also contributing to ease of operation are the new flow-sharing valves, which automatically proportion hydraulic flow between the boom and stick or between the boom and swing functions to more exactly match the operator’s intentions. In essence, says Joy, the flow-sharing valves make multiple-function operation easier to control, which helps less-experienced operators maintain acceptable production rates, and offers experienced operators more precise control and the prospect of higher production.

Caterpillar backhoe-loaders have long used the company’s “torque-limiter control,” which is basically a system that manages the distribution of engine power between the hydraulic system and the drive train. According to Joy, refinements in this system result not only in enhanced loader performance through a more precise split of engine power between the hydraulic system and drive wheels, but also in a more aggressive backhoe by assuring that maximum engine power is used to develop hydraulic flow.

The operator’s station for E-Series models has been completely redesigned, featuring a new four-post ROPS configuration that provides more interior space than the ROPS configuration for the D-Series. Overall, improvements to fit and finish in the new cab further contribute an automotive-type environment, which was already apparent on D-Series models.

For E-Series models, the front console has been made narrower to provide enhanced visibility to the loader bucket, and a hood that is lower by 3.5 inches at the cowl further improves visibility. The right-side console has been made more compact, further enlarging interior space, and a foot pedal controller for the tilt steering wheel makes the spin from loader to backhoe positions that much easier.

A significant change for E-Series models is the in-cab switch for easily changing the digging pattern between hydraulic-excavator and backhoe-loader configurations. A two-position electrical switch on the left console allows the selection. By contrast, D-series models had a pattern-changer control on the left side of the machine’s frame, behind the rear tire — obviously not as handy as the E-Series design.

Another cab enhancement of note is the increased performance of the optional air-conditioning system. A larger compressor, 20-percent increase in airflow, and repositioned vents go a long way toward increased operator comfort, says Caterpillar. In addition, the air-conditioning system incorporates easier-accessed filter locations, one in the right inner fender and one in the right console. Both can be cleaned with compressed air.

Combine the amenities of the new E-Series cab with Caterpillar’s fresh design for basic structures, hydraulics, power train and utility-enhancing features (like the new extendible stick and hydraulic thumb), and the result is a solid new E-Series platform that should serve the company long and well.
Two very different kinds of backhoe-loader buyers dominate sales of full-sized machines (dig depths of 14 feet and larger), and their very different expectations may have polarized the hydraulic-system designs in this most popular of true earthmovers. The relatively small group of volume buyers from government agencies and large rental fleets are looking for a bombproof machine and tend to be price sensitive. Owner/operators and small-business buyers, while certainly motivated by value, are willing to pay a little extra for proven production-improving features.

In order to take market share in this relatively high-dollar, high-volume machine category, manufacturers must appeal to both groups. They’ve done so admirably with technologies that can be added to machines as standard equipment. For example, the most recent new backhoe designs (from Caterpillar, New Holland and JCB) have replaced foot controls for extending sticks and auxiliary hydraulics with switches mounted on control levers. They employ finger and thumb dexterity to improve control and clear the floor for more comfortable footing.

Pilot hydraulic controls represent another kind of challenge to backhoe OEMs. These circuits are plumbed in between control levers and the valves on the backhoe’s main operating circuits. When you move a joystick in the cab, it activates a pilot hydraulic circuit, which in turn moves a spool on the main-pressure valve. Pilot hydraulics require less lever effort to manipulate the backhoe.

Main pressures in backhoes have climbed to a point where lever effort can influence productivity. Eight of the 35 backhoe models 14-foot and larger have hydraulic-system pressures of 3,500 psi or higher. All eight are available with pilot hydraulic controls, mostly as an option.

Why not make pilot hydraulics standard equipment? One reason is operator preference. Backhoe-loaders have been controlled by levers linked to main valves since their invention, and lots of operators claim they can feel pressure spikes in the hydraulic system when a bucket hits a hard object, like a natural-gas line. Some say pilot hydraulics insulate the control levers to that feedback from the bucket.

Another reason for keeping pilot hydraulics optional is their cost. Nevertheless, most manufacturers (Cat, Deere, JCB, Komatsu, Terex and Volvo) sell at least some of their machines with standard pilot-operated hydraulic controls.

“The inclusion of pilot controls has had the biggest impact on the industry in the last 24 months,” says Bob Tyler, with John Deere. “Operator comfort becomes increasingly more important as businesses try to keep their best operators. With pilot controls, operators are less fatigued at the end of the day, and more productive as a result.”

Deere makes pilot hydraulics standard on the 17-foot 710G, a machine that, by virtue of its size, is clearly targeted at buyers who are willing to pay for backhoe productivity. But pilot hydraulics are optional on the 15-foot 410G and 14-foot 310SG. They’re not offered on the base-model 310G.

Only JCB and Komatsu make pilot hydraulics standard across their full-sized backhoe offering. The other manufacturers retain some models without the feature. Caterpillar, for instance, doesn’t offer pilot controls on the 416E, but makes them standard on the 420E and 430E.

Splitting the product line has become common in recent months. Since the first of this year, Volvo made pilot hydraulics standard equipment on the BL70 but doesn’t offer the option on the lower-spec’d BL60. Terex announced that it would begin installing pilot controls as standard equipment on the TX970 and TX870, leaving the feature as an option on the smaller TX860 and TX760.

If this is indeed an indication of OEMs fielding a price leader for one set of buyers and a full-featured machine for another, it’s also possible that the buyer dichotomy may shape some backhoes’ basic DNA.

There is notable inconsistency in hydraulic-system designs used on today’s full-sized backhoes. Long-time backhoe-loader OEMs such as JCB, Case and New Holland use open-centered hydraulic circuits with fixed-displacement gear pumps. Those who began manufacturing backhoes more recently, such as Caterpillar, Komatsu and Terex, use closed-center hydraulics.

John Deere started a shakeup several years ago by adding machines with closed-center hydraulics to a lineup that had always used open-center designs.

For Deere — one of the venerable names in backhoe-loader manufacture — to design larger backhoe-loaders with closed-center systems and retain 14-foot machines (the 310G and SG) with open-center hydraulics, there must have been convincing market research measuring a significant customer base for both.

The newest entrant to the backhoe market, Volvo, is making similar moves. Volvo first brought the BL70 with a closed-center system, but followed with open-center hydraulics in the BL60. The two machines are nearly identical structurally — same dig depth and basic dimensions — but the BL60 has a little less engine and hydraulic horsepower.

It’s extremely unlikely that an OEM would redesign a system with a higher-cost pump that has even the slightest perception, right or wrong, of shorter life if there was also a strong operator preference for another type of system.

It’s much more likely that a closed-center circuit — technology that drives all full-sized excavators — is a very good choice for production earthmoving. Thanks to Caterpillar bringing it to backhoe-loaders in the 1980s, the challenge to other OEMs competing in the product category has been to either make their open-center systems perform more like closed-center systems, or to build a closed-center system that’s cost effective for these smaller machines.

All of the JCB backhoes, New Holland’s B115, and Volvo’s BL60 use open-center circuits with load-sensing valves that can vary pump flow with oil demand. When flow requirements fall, the valve signals one of these machines’ twin hydraulic pumps to shut down, reducing the amount of energy the machine wastes pushing hydraulic oil over relief. The feature is similar to the interaction between a variable-displacement pump and the main valve in a closed-center system.

There should be lots of new machines to evaluate between now and the end of 2007, when under-100-hp engines will have to comply with EPA’s Tier 3 emissions limits. Real-world issues such as dealer support and operator acceptance should influence those purchase decisions more than pilot hydraulics or closed-center circuits, but it is encouraging to see that sophisticated technologies are shaping the kind of backhoes available. In the end, the industry gets a choice of more-productive backhoes.

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The History of the Backhoe

Today backhoes are commonly found on almost every construction job. It is hard to imagine any dirt moving job without some backhoe work.

Backhoes are compact and easy to maneuver. One of the reasons they are so popular is the ability to quickly do small jobs otherwise done by hand. Rubber tires give it mobility to handle material and load out unused spoil from excavations. They can also work around obstructions and in tight areas.

The commonly seen tractor with a front bucket and a rear mounted backhoe was first built in 1953 by a British company known as JCB. In fact, for years a backhoe tractor was known as a JCB no matter who built them. In 1957, Case Tractor Company bought out the original manufacturer. With the acquisition by Case came many improvements to the original design.

After the acquisition was complete, Case engineer Elton Long and his team brought in resources from throughout the company to finish development of an integrated loader/backhoe under a very tight deadline. By early spring, Case had successfully merged technologies to create the Case 320, the first fully integrated loader/backhoe made and warranted by one company.

Many people think the term back hoe refers to the fact that the digging attachment is located on the rear of the tractor. However, the term originally referred to the action of the bucket. The digging operation is carried out by using hydraulic power to pull the bucket back towards the tractor.

Now, the backhoe can be even more versatile with a backhoe attachment for your Bobcat or other skid steer loader. Industrial Products and Equipment has now made arrangements with the manufacturer to market a simple yet very efficient dirt moving machine.

The skid loader backhoe attachment, quickly converts the skid steer into a excavator or trencher. With the addition of a thumb, your loader can also be used to carry and place heavy and bulky items. If you need to transport, the dirt from a trenching operation, the bucket can be quickly swapped using the loaders quick attach feature.

While a traditional tractor style backhoe is highly maneuverable, nothing beats a skid steer loader for getting into small tight places. Having a simple quick connect back hoe will add a great deal of versatility to your machine.

Do you ever wonder why fire truck manufacturers offer prepayment discounts? And the financial implications of prepaying your fire truck? This article helps you understand why they offer discounts and how to analyze them.

Why fire truck manufacturers offer prepayment discounts.

The first question I get asked from hundreds of fire departments is: Why do manufacturers even offer a prepayment discount? It seems like they are losing money. Well, they’re not and I’ll explain why in this article.

It’s the timing of the money.

Manufacturers spend a lot of money for wages, parts, and overhead during the construction of your fire truck. They won’t get paid back this money until you pay them at delivery. So, the manufacturer has to borrow this money during construction and pays interest on this money.

So, they offer a prepayment discount.

By offering a prepayment discount, the manufacturer is trying to entice you, the customer, to be the bank during construction. They are basically borrowing from you and “paying” you a discount instead of paying interest to their local bank. Usually, that discount is less than what they would have to pay the bank for interest.

What should you consider before prepaying your fire truck?

There are 2 parts to this question. There is a financial part - does it make financial sense to prepay the truck or, in other words, am I ahead money-wise when prepaying? Then, there is the personal comfort part that needs to be considered. Let’s start with the second part.

Neither a lender nor borrower be.

This is old advice but applies when you are asked to lend your fire truck manufacturer the money to build your fire truck.

You need to answer the following very hard questions in your mind: Are you OK lending money to the manufacturer? Are you OK with the fact that you are taking on the risk of losing the money? What will I do if the manufacturer goes bankrupt? Or delays my delivery?

These are questions that only you can answer for yourself. Regardless if the discount is a great financial deal or not, if you can’t get comfortable with the fact you’re lending money (and taking the risk along with it), don’t do it. It will drive you crazy. Lending isn’t for people who want safe.

So, is it a good deal?

The other part of the prepayment analysis is about measuring if the prepayment makes financial sense. Is it a good deal?

The answer is: It depends. Each discount and situation is different.

How prepayment analysis goes wrong.

The basic measurement if the prepayment is a good financial deal is: can you earn more money (or pay less interest if you need to borrow) than what the manufacturer is offering you as a discount? Most fire departments miss that part of the analysis. They think the discount is free. It’s not.

I’ve seen situations where the department actually loses money by prepaying a truck. Or where the discount of tens of thousands of dollars actually benefited the department by only a few hundred dollars.

I am out of time in this article but will explore how you measure the true costs and savings of prepaying your fire truck in the article Fire Truck prepayments: Is it a good deal?

In this article we will also discuss:

Revenue

Expenditure

The use of goods and services in order to earn revenue is the expense.

Hendriksen opines, “expenses are the using or consuming of goods and services in the process of obtaining revenues”.

American Accounting Association, Committee on concepts and standards, defines as under:

“Expense is the expired cost, directly or indirectly related to given fiscal period, of the flow of goods or services into the market and of related operations.”

(a) Expenditure incurred during the fiscal period and related to same accounting period becomes an expense i.e. expired cost of that period.

(b) Expenditure incurred during the previous accounting period but related to current accounting period becomes an expense i.e. expired cost of the current accounting period e.g. prepaid expenses.

(c) Expenditure related to the current accounting period but not paid becomes outstanding expenses.

Expenditure is usually of two types:

(a) Capital expenditure; and

(b) Revenue expenditure.

Capital Expenditure

Capital expenditure consists of expenditure, the benefit of which is not fully enjoyed in one accounting period but spread over several accounting periods. It includes assets acquired for the purpose of earning income or increasing the earning capacity of the business or effecting economy in the operation of an asset. These are not meant for sale. Expenditure incurred for improving assets and extending an existing asset is also capital expenditure.

The sum of invoice price, freight and insurance charges, installation and erection cost and custom duty etc. will be capitalized in the books of a firm. These capital items appear on the assets side of Balance Sheet.

Examples:

(a) Interest on capital paid during the period of construction of Company (u/s 208 of Indian Companies Act)

(b) Expenditure in connection with or incidental to the purchase or installation of an asset.

(c) Acquisition of new assets.

(d) Expenditure incurred for putting the old asset purchased, into working condition.

(e) Additions and extensions to existing assets.

(f) Interest and financing charges paid, brokerage and commission paid.

(g) Betterment of fixed assets or improvement of an asset to produce more, to improve its earning capacity or to reduce its operating expenses or to increase the life of asset.

The cost of assets will be written off by way of depreciation over a period of its life. The amount of depreciation is a revenue expenditure and is debited to profit and loss account. The reason for charging depreciation to revenue i.e. profit and loss account is that the asset is used for earning revenue. Hence the depreciation is charged to profit and loss account. Thus, the benefit of capital expenditure does not exhaust in one year but extends over a number of years of its use or life of the asset.

Revenue Expenditure

Revenue expenditure consists of expenditure incurred in one period of the accounting, the full benefit of which is enjoyed in that period only. This does not increase the earning capacity of the business but it is incurred in order to maintain the existing earning capacity of the business. It includes all expenses which arise in normal course of business. The benefit of such expenditure is for a short period, say, one year only and it is not to be carried forward to the next year. The expenditure is of a recurring nature i.e. incurred every year.

Examples:

(a) Purchase of raw materials for conversion into finished goods.

(b) Selling and distribution expenses incurred for sale of finished goods e.g. sales office expenses, delivery expenses, advertisement charges, et(%

(c) Establishment expenses like salaries, wages, rent, rates, taxes, insurance, depreciation on office equipment.

(d) Depreciation of plant, machinery and equipment.

(e) Expenses incurred in order to maintain the existing fixed assets in an efficient and workable state such’ as repairs to building, repairs to plant, white-washing and painting of building.

All these items appear on the debit side of trading and profit and loss account, in case of trading concerns or income and expenditure account, in case of non-trading concerns.

Deferred Revenue Expenditure (DRE)

Deferred Revenue Expenditure is a revenue expenditure which has been incurred during one accounting year which is applicable either wholly or in part to further accounting years. According to Prof. A.W. Johnson, “Deferred Revenue Expenditure includes those non-recurring expenses, which are expected to be of financial nature, distributed to several accounting periods of indeterminate total length. These are of revenue nature but are deferred or postponed. It is of quasi- capital nature.”

In simpler words, we can say that Deferred Revenue Expenses are those expenses, the benefit of which may be extended to a number of years, say, 3 to 5 years. These are to be charged to profit and loss account, over a period of 3 to 5 years depending upon the benefit accrued.

Sometimes losses may be suffered of an exceptional nature e.g. loss of an asset (uninsured) due to accident or fire; confiscation of property in a foreign country etc. It is worth noting that the amount which has not been debited to the profit and loss account of the current year is shown in the balance sheet on the assets side and it is known as fictitious asset.

Development expenditure

In certain units like mines, plantations and housing colonies initially heavy expenditure has to be incurred and it is only after sometime, say three to five years, that the earnings will follow. Such heavy and initial expenditure is known as ‘development expenditure’ and treated as capital expenditure.

Purpose of Distinction

Profit and Loss Account is debited with revenue expenditure and credited with revenue income (i.e. sales income and from other sources). If the revenue income is higher than revenue expenditure, it will be a profit and if it is less than revenue expenditure, it will be a loss. Capital expenditure is shown on the assets side of Balance Sheet. Capital and liabilities are shown on the liabilities side of Balance Sheet. The purpose of distinction is to give “True and fair” view of the accounts and financial position of the firm.

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How To Buy Used Backhoe Equipment

The backhoe equipment consists of three parts. The main one is the tractor. The loader is the second part of the backhoe equipment. The loader is a big rectangular shaped device which scoops the material.

The third part are the buckets at the rear of the tractor. Typically, if the bucket is being used, the flat front end of the loader is set down on the ground to stabilize the vehicle. Optional backhoe equipment includes street pads and rear stabilizers for increased performance and versatility (for some models only).

When bying used backhoe equipment, you must have it properly inspected to ensure that it is free of any mechanical, hydraulic, or electrical problems. Of course, used backhoe equipment is much cheaper than brand new, but you must take into account the maintainenance costs.

Finding the right used backhoe service solutions will increase your productivity and profitability while lengthening the life of your used backhoe. The people working at the service are responsible for supplying you with all the necessary new and used backhoe parts to keep your used backhoe in top shape. The best idea is to sign a contract with a service that has several different part departments withing your state. In that way, wherever you are with your used backhoe, the service will be close by with the parts you need.

When buying used backhoe equipment, don’t forget that there will surely be some maintenance costs associated with its use, so it’s not just about choosing the model, but also the dealer and service. Such heavy duty construction equipment, especially second-hand, will wear and break at some point, so your relationship with the dealer is very important for preventative maintenance and repairs. Find about your dealer’s service policy, check how they handle breakdowns, who should transport it, can they provide you with a backhoe until yours is fixed? This is very important, because such serious construction projects have to go as planned in the schedule, so consider what can happen if you loose your backhoe for a week due to repairs. Also check their parts inventory, because you don’t want to wait for parts.

Caseused.com is one of the leading sites for used construction equipment, including backhoes and delivers to a world wide audience. The site features many listings for used backhoes, loader backhoes, excavators and other types of construction machinery. All brands are represented. The site supports different types of searches based on make, model, hours, price as well as language, currency, country, and equipment type.

Some calculations must be made before buying used backhoe equipment, because you don’t want to end up spending more money in the long run (like 10 years) compared to buying a brand new backhoe loader. Of course, prices drop significantly once the machine has a few thousand hours of use. The number of hours used is a main criteria when estimating the price. For example, a base-model 14′ digging depth backhoe is sold brand new for $55,000 to $75,000, while the same model but used for 2,000 hours can be found for around $30,000. If the hours of operation are even more, the price drops further.

Rugged laptops and rugged notebooks, sometimes referred to as mobile computers, are used in a variety of settings, such as mounted on vehicles, like jeeps or carts for businesses or warehouse uses. There are many applications for the rugged laptops and rugged notebook computers. These computers are made rugged to withstand the punishment that can go along with being mounted on a vehicle or heavy construction equipment in a construction zone. They are made of durable plastic or sometimes covered in a rubber coating that will take a beating and keep on going.

These rugged laptops and rugged notebooks are built to take extremes such as heat, wind, vibrations, dust, water, cold and other elements a normal computer would not be able to withstand.

You can purchase a rugged laptop or a rugged notebook with an outdoor readable LCD which means the screen is readable outdoors in the sunlight, which many laptops and notebooks of regular built are not, you have to purchase an additional sun-blocker type screen to put over the initial screen and that only block some of the suns UV rays. With the outdoor readable LCD screens, there is no more squinting or moving from place to place to find a good spot to read what’s on the screen because everywhere you are sitting is a good spot for these screens.

Another feature of the rugged laptops and rugged notebooks is the touch screen which enables the user to touch the screen when they want to switch between screens or use it as an adding machine in the case of a warehouse worker adding up inventory. A touch screen allows the user to bring up multiple screens to view products in inventory or delayed shipments or a host of other things that might be backlogging the warehouse and the sales floor. A touchscreen will save space because a keypad is not necessary and a keyboard is something that will ultimately get in the way of a rugged laptop or rugged notebook and they always get dirt and other debris caught between the keys, this way a touchscreen keeps everything neat and tidy and all in one place.

Some of the rugged laptops and rugged notebooks come with a vehicle mounting hardware or RAM Mounts. They are the revolutionary ball and socket joint mounting system that allows you to mount the laptops and notebook computers and smaller GPS - Global Positioning Systems - on to such smaller vehicles like motorcycles and bicycles. And the rugged laptops and rugged notebooks can be mounted onto four-wheelers and fishing boats so that they are stabilized and can be used to determine you position in the area or track your prey if you are hunting.

Vehicle mounting hardware is easy to install in any vehicle on the dashboard or near the front center of the vehicle where the driver or passenger can view the outdoor readable LCD screen or use the touchscreen if needed. With the vehicle mounting, the rugged notebooks and rugged laptops are removable so you can take them on the boat or in the tent with you for the evening to watch a program or play a game.

Skid steer loaders are machines used in different types of construction sites, and are applicable especially in tight spaces because they are small and easy maneuverable.

They are equipped with wheels and can turn in their own tracks, making them extremely valuable for applications that require a compact, agile loader. They have light weight and so, they can be towed behind a pickup truck.

The skid steel loader has four wheels and its characteristic is that the left-side drive wheels are independent of the right-side drive wheels. This way, wheel speed and direction of rotation of the wheels will determine the direction the machine will turn.

The skid steel loaders have a simple operating system. Inside the cabin there are two joysticks: a left hand joystick and a right hand joystick. The left hand one is made for controlling the direction. The right hand one is for controlling the loader arms and bucket. By pulling the joystick back, the arms of the machine will raise; by pushing the joystick forward, the arms will be lowered. In order to tilt the bucket up the joystick must be moved to the left. By moving it to the right the bucket will dump. All the system is powered by hydraulic pumps, meaning that there is no mechanical transmission.

The Skid steel loader is suitable for digging and moving landscaping and other building materials. Due to its numerous tools it can also grade, jackhammer cement and load trucks. Some of the special tools of the skid steer loaders are: a dirt bucket, utility grapple bucket, pallet forks, utility fork, angle blade, auger, broom, cold planer, hydraulic hammer, landscape rake and tillers, material handling arm, stump grinder trencher and a vibratory compactor. These tools make skid steel loaders quite useful because there will not be necessary 10 machines any more to complete all these functions.

Another useful machine in the construction field is the backhoes. They are generally used for many different jobs and can replace many other types of heavy equipment at the construction site.

They are designed in a unique way; they have tools sticking out from every way of the machine. The backhoes can be considered to have three pieces of construction equipment combined into one unit: a tractor, a loader and a classical backhoe. Because the backhoes can use all these three functions at a construction site they are considered to be quite valuable and replace other machines.

The backhoe’s core structure is the tractor. Its design allows the machine to move easily over different type of rough terrain. It is equipped with a turbocharged diesel engine, with tires and a cabin for the pilot.

The loader is another part of the backhoe. It is attached in the front, while the backhoe is situated in the back. The loader is used as a spoon that picks up and carries a lot of loose material. It can also be used for smoothing things over, or for pushing dirt.

The backhoe loader also has a backhoe in the back of the tractor. Its function is to dig earth, or to lift heavy loads and then drop them in a pile at the side of the hole. All kinds of holes can be digged with a backhoe but most of all is suitable for ditches. In order not to fall inside the hole, the backhoes are equipped with stabilizer legs.

The backhoes are used mostly for digging ditches with the backhoe, and then for carrying out the dirt with the loader. After the work is done in that are, the loader will fill back the ditch with the extracted dirt.

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Excavating With a Backhoe

The Backhoe is the most common piece of machinery used in construction industry. Backhoe probably is the one which can be mostly seen on any construction site - whether on roads or large structures. A Backhoe is essentially a digging equipment always fitted with a vehicle. It is often termed excavator or backhoe loader.

Backhoe functions much like human arm - it can dig, lift the material and throw (dump). Backhoe has three parts - boom, stick, and bucket. Boom is attached to the vehicle (often called tractor), and joined with stick. Other end of the stick is joined to the bucket. Now the design is complete - bucket as hands, stick as your forearm and boom as upper arm.
Tractor is attached with the other two components in the system - the backhoe and the loader. Backhoe does the digging, tractor makes the whole unit movable and the loader shifts the dug material. These three make up the whole unit needed on the construction sites.

Operating the backhoe

Operator sitting inside the tractor finds facing the control panel in his front on the dashboard. It has three major consoles - one each for the tractor, backhoe and the loader. A skilled operator knows that backhoe operations need more application than the front loader. Operator has to simultaneously operate the vehicle (tractor) and the backhoe. The operation starts with digging the hole and then dumping the dug material on the side (or even loading a truck parked nearby). Two stabilizer legs support the unit - once the tractor is parked at the desired place, these two legs are jutted out from beneath the unit. These two legs provide extra support to the unit. Once this is done, the operator will use one of the levers to reach the desired digging point by extending the arm. Another lever on the console is then used to lower the bucket to make it touch the ground. Third lever in the system is used to start the digging operations - this lever forces down the bucket into the earth. The inward motion ensures the dug material fill up the bucket. Once the bucket is filled up, it is either dumped sidewise or into the dump truck.

Compact backhoes

Another very popular variety of backhoes is compact backhoes. These compact backhoes can be kept in the same category as those like skid-steer loaders, compact wheel loaders and trenchers. While each of these types has its own sets of pro’s and con’s, it is important to keep in mind the main application where these will be put to use. Compact backhoes are known for very efficient digging, faster load and carry cycles and light attachment use. If you are looking to have an application asking for digging upto six feet depth, compact backhoes are exceptionally good for the purpose. Compact backhoes are very easy to use, and need far less time to be detached from the tractor unit. Curved bottom boom structures are also characterized by some compact backhoes available in the market. When the application involves heavy truck loading operations, compact backhoes have proved to be a great boon.

Some of the major and reputed backhoe manufacturers are JCB, Caterpillar, John Deere, Case, KPX, Massey Ferguson, etc.

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