May 2008

Putting Your Best Foot Forward

With compact equipment, the performance issues are footprint, traction, and ground pressure.

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By Peter Hildebrandt

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Compact utility equipment is definitely part of the landscape out there. Even on the largest farms or construction sites with all their huge equipment, the small compact utility equipment for the in-between task is turning out to be a must-have piece of equipment.

“Compact equipment is so adaptable and easy to maintain and repair that most farmers and other operators, regardless of farm acreage, now have this machinery,” says Bill Cunningham product manager of Carlisle Tire and Wheel, Aiken, SC. “The only question remaining is whether this is their primary or secondary use equipment. Its effectiveness and low cost are several reasons why it’s become so popular.”

What should you consider in ordering your skid-steer or compact loader? For instance, if you’re going to be doing a great deal of work in landscape or in sensitive habitats, you need to take steps to prevent turf damage. If you’re configured with tracks, should they be rubber or steel? How about tracks that fit over tires or systems allowing you to switch from one to the other? Users, dealers and manufacturers around the country give their take.

Footprint
The Linn County Road Department in Oregon uses a D-6 dozer for shaping and grading on construction projects and a tracked excavator for cleaning ditches or doing whatever excavation is necessary. The company’s smaller rollers used for patching during grading operations are compact equipment.

It has on occasion rented a compact excavator through Sunbelt Rentals to clean ditches on a very narrow road. “This compact equipment—a Bobcat excavator—was certainly something we’d consider purchasing if we didn’t have budget constraints,” says Jim Ableman, operations manager. “I can see where such equipment would be useful, as things do come up.

“The biggest issue for us is when we get out on the road and are using a backhoe with the outriggers down. The outriggers are used to provide tip-over stability. On one particular road we were working on, the two lanes were only 20 feet wide. Once the outriggers were put down, every time a car came by, despite flaggers controlling the traffic, we had to lift the outriggers up to let the traffic pass by.

“But with our compact equipment, it allowed the traffic to pass right through there without any problem at all. It’s amazing how just a simple thing like that can make such a difference work and timewise.”

Deschutes County, Oregon’s operations include both roadwork and their landfill operations with large machinery used in both areas. It also recently purchased compact Bobcat all-wheel drive equipment two months ago. This is a wheeled machine, not a skid-steer. It has an asphalt grinder, stump grinder, buckets and other attachments. It’s used for road shoulder work or road-widening projects.

“We also have an auger for this machine so when we’re replacing guard rails we’re able to make use of it,” says Terry Brown, Deschutes County field equipment mechanic. “We’d rented one for quite awhile and then decided finally we’d purchase one. It was bought with the attachments.

“Tires help with speed, as tracked equipment is slower. Also, we’re not working in too harsh an environment where anything would be slicing up the tires, enough to make steel tracks necessary. We do have foam filling on all our big loader tires down at our landfill, as that is a rough environment with lots of metal and nails.”

Deschutes County just traded in a 1991 wheel-loader with 29,000 hours on it, which only went through two sets of tires in all those hours of operation. “We never had a problem with the transmission or differentials, even with the heavy foam-fill in the tires, other than normal maintenance. Though the tires have some 1,000 pounds added per tire with the foam, the Caterpillar equipment seems to hold up just fine.”

As with Linn County, Deschutes County also has many narrow roads to work on. “Over the 20 years I’ve worked here, we’ve worked hard to get rid of road hazards, questionable trees and other debris. So we really needed this Bobcat. Stumps are usually ground down below the subgrade of the shoulder. It saves us from digging them out and hauling them away.

“With our asphalt grinding, we do a lot of patching, so we needed that function as well. This equipment has also been able to serve other functions as well. Recently we had a flood on a smaller creek ten miles from here. We were able to team up with the search and rescue and ended up using that Bobcat equipment to haul the sandbags down to the waterline, saving much manpower and man-hours in getting them where they were needed.

“This compact equipment is versatile machinery. We needed the speed of tires more than the floatation or protection from rough material that steel or rubber tracks provide. In the wake of a violent northwest storm in December 2007, our county sent three or four dump trucks, backhoes, and wheel loaders up to a small town northwest of Portland, which was under 3 feet of water. Under those conditions, it’s good not to have to depend on a rental yard to have the equipment ready for such emergencies that could mean the saving of property and lives.”

Talking About Tires and Tracks
Compact equipment does a good job of getting into places other equipment can’t. Having the right tires or tracks also makes a big difference in how quickly a job can get done. McLaren Rubber Industries manufactures a wide range of tracks and tires products for compact equipment in the range of 10-inch to 12-inch tires. Options on tires include several main categories within each of which there are a number of offerings.

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Pneumatic tires can be used, perhaps the most inexpensive option. They come with the machine when purchased and they’re the most inexpensive to replace or patch. They can be flat-proofed with foam or other chemicals.

A second option is solid tires, which work in very abusive environments such as scrap yards or demolition sites. The third option is semi-pneumatic tires. These offer the benefits of both solid and pneumatic tires for cushioning, shock absorption, durability as well as being flatproof. Next Page >

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