Excavation Equipment

Front Loader

Also known as a front end loader, bucket loader,

scoop loader, or shovel, the front loader is a type

of tractor that is normally wheeled and uses a

wide square tilting bucket on the end of movable

arms to lift and move material around.

The loader assembly may be a removable attachment

or permanently mounted on the vehicle. Often times,

the bucket can be replaced with other devices or

tools, such as forks or a hydraulically operated

bucket.

Larger style front loaders, such as the Caterpillar

950G or the Volvo L120E, normally have only a

front bucket and are known as front loaders,

where the small front loaders are often times

equipped with a small backhoe as well and called

backhoe loaders or loader backhoes.

Loaders are primarily used for loading materials

into trucks, laying pipe, clearing rubble, and

also digging. Loaders aren’t the most efficient

machines for digging, as they can’t dig very deep

below the level of their wheels, like the backhoe

can.

The deep bucket on the front loader can normally

store around 3 – 6 cubic meters of dirt, as the

bucket capacity of the loader is much bigger than

the bucket capacity of a backhoe loader. Loaders

aren’t classified as excavating machinery, as

their primary purpose is other than moving dirt.

In construction areas, mainly when fixing roads

in the middle of the city, front loaders are

used to transport building materials such as

pipe, bricks, metal bars, and digging tools.

Front loaders are also very useful for snow

removal as well, as you can use their bucket or

as a snow plow. They can clear snow from the

streets and highways, even parking lots. They

will sometimes load the snow into dump trucks

which will then haul it away.

Unlike the bulldozer, most loaders are wheeled and

not tracked. The wheels will provide better

mobility and speed and won’t damage paved roads

near as much as tracks, although this will come

at the cost of reduced traction.

Unlike backhoes or tractors fitted with a steel

bucket, large loaders don’t use automotive

steering mechanisms, as they instead steer by a

hydraulically actuated pivot point set exactly

between the front and rear axles. This is known

as articulated steering and will allow the front

axle to be solid, therefore allowing it to carry

a heavier weight.

Articulated steering will also give a reduced

turn in radius for a given wheelbase. With the

front wheels and attachment rotating on the same

axis, the operator is able to steer his load in

an arc after positioning the machine, which can

come in quite handy. The problem is that when

the machine is twisted to one side and a heavy

load is lifted high in the air, it has a bigger

risk of turning over.

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