September 2009

A Dump Truck by any Other Name

Articulated haulers and rigid haulers are very different machines.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Photo: John Deere

Additional Article Content

By Lori Lovely

Comments


Because of their rotating hitch between cab and body, they can tackle rough terrain without frame twist and with less tire wear than the conventional steering design used on the RDT.

Other key considerations are the size of the job and production requirements. Payload size is very different for the two types of haulers. “Rigid haulers usually have higher load capacities than articulated haulers,” Pressley says. Capacity ranges from 40 tons to 380 tons, while maximum capacity for the ADT, according to Moore, is 43 tons.

The two types of trucks are simply “designed for two different needs,” states Melissa Gauger, with International Truck & Engine in Warrenville, IL. These two needs, she says, are “dedicated off-highway and on-off-highway.”

ADTs are very adaptable and can easily work in hostile conditions where other equipment can’t go, because they can get to a job site and back without being disassembled. All-wheel-drive and suspension designed to keep all wheels on the ground in rough terrain means they operate in off-road conditions and are therefore better suited to short-term projects such as new construction.

Photo: John Deere
Articulated haulers are designed for use in practically all terrains.

“Articulated trucks are ideal for hauling materials on undeveloped construction sites, such as residential and commercial building starts, road and bridge construction, mines, quarries, and landfills,” says Ken Emmett, product manager for Terex Construction Americas in Moline, IA. They’re easier to move around, are smaller, and don’t require a permit to move. The initial purchase price is usually less.

The choice should also be based on how long the job will last and how much is being hauled. Rigid trucks are bigger and can haul more per trip, thereby reducing operating costs and making them appropriate for longer-term projects at mines and quarries where better haul roads are usually built—roads sometimes pioneered by an ADT. In addition, they have a longer life because they’re less complicated. According to Caterpillar, RDTs are more in demand in large mining and quarrying applications, where high-volume production is the focus. Conversely, ADTs are better suited to smaller operations, especially where sites have steep grades.

Vive la Difference
The two types of dump trucks are “designed drastically differently,” emphasizes Bill Nadelhoffer, product marketing manager of trucks for Komatsu, “to capitalize on different applications better.”

Standard configuration of an RDT, he explains, is rear-wheel drive on four wheels, so it is capable of achieving higher speeds, although it requires prepared roads. Conversely, the ADT goes anywhere, albeit more slowly, with its six-wheel-drive permitting it to travel in rough terrain through worse conditions where roads don’t even exist.

Advertisement

Typical markets for the RDT include quarries—specifically, limestone, hard rock, and marble. Nadelhoffer refers to a Komatsu customer in Georgia who mines kaolin, used in toothpaste and paint. “He needs high production out of the quarry to feed the hopper,” indicating that speed is imperative. “The rigid is a specialized animal, good for high-production quarries.”

The ADT, on the other hand, is versatile because of its design: six-wheel drive, oscillation of axles, and articulation. ADTs are often used at landfills and for road-building projects since they can “run up to the axle in mud.” The artic is available in 30-, 35- and 40-ton, while the rigid offers capacity up to 260 tons. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get GX Contractor Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our GX Contractor email newsletter!