May 2009

Pulling More Than Their Weight

Pull scrapers may not challenge the big guys for brute force, but theyre the right size for an increasing number of jobs.

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Photo: Caterpillar

By Peter Hildebrandt

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“What makes us unique is our ability to get around in tight corners and tight spots; our scrapers are maneuverable enough that you can make a U-turn on a fairly narrow dam of about 20 feet.”

Helping Sod to Be Skim-able
James Hall of Hall Enterprises in LaGrange, KY, uses Hoelscher scrapers largely for leveling construction sites. Hall finds the scrapers especially good for building sites and around commercial excavation. Hall Enterprises uses its scrapers mostly with a John Deere 110, about a 43-horsepower TLB tractor with four-wheel drive, finding that such equipment pulls a scraper well. The company recently put up a machinery storage area that was 60 by 127 feet. All of the site work on the project was done with the scraping equipment.

On a site of less than 10,000 square feet, such as a site clearing for a barn, these scrapers are ideal, Hall points out. Occasionally Hall has used them to remove the topsoil and dump it a few yards away. Then he’ll fill in with the construction debris, including rock and clay from the excavation. With that same pan, Hall will return and scoop up the remains, placing them over the subsoil area.

The company came at this from the construction angle, where equipment not as large as that involved in excavation was required. Though Hall has used it for roads, it is for creating roads in and around buildings on private property.

Hall also finds the pan is especially helpful for skimming sod off the ground before a road is laid down. “Sod is actually very difficult to handle,” adds Hall. “It’s a lot more difficult than loose dirt and comes up in a ribbon. That’s the reason we use the skirted dirt pan. Once the sod’s removed the rock can be laid down. Then you use your roller scraper, taper lug, and graders for compaction and smoothing out.”

Photo: Humdinger
Humdinger designs its line of pull scrapers for the construction rather than the agricultural market.
Before discovering the practicality of skimming up the sod, Hall used his tractor to till up the sod. That was the only option they had. But he’s found the dirt pan a much more desirable option in dealing with sod removal.

Keeping Weights Low for Better Fuel Economy
K-Tec offers scrapers pulled behind rock trucks, an innovative idea, according to Ken Rempel, president of K-Tec. The company offered its first scrapers for sale or resale in 2003.

“We classify ourselves as scraper specialists with a lot of concentration on what it takes to make a scraper work fast, efficiently, and with the lowest fuel cost running for the most yards of earth moved,” says Rempel.

“We played around with different types of steel, trying to get our machines lighter but stronger—which turns into more payload—as well as shaping the scraper correctly to the point where we can load many yards easily. Just to compare a bit, when we started manufacturing scrapers, the largest pull-pan scraper out there was about 18 yards. We started with about 28 yards and have gone up from there.

“That feat was accomplished with the same horsepower tractors and with keeping our hitch and tongue weight down. Most scrapers haven’t focused much on keeping the weight down on the tongue so it won’t tear up the tractor.”

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K-Tec has found a way to strategically place the load and balance the machine out. Focusing on tractor hitches—so that more weight could be added to the tongue and not jeopardize the life of the tractor—has been critical for K-Tec. The company now has scrapers that are larger than a number of the largest motor scrapers available and are competing with them.

K-Tec scrapers can run with lighter machines, burn less fuel, and still handle much of the same volume as motor scrapers, according to Rempel. “We’ve managed to do that with much lower horsepowers and for a fraction of the cost—roughly half the overhead costs. Among the largest scrapers out there is the 44-yard scraper, but it also has to be pushed or push-pulled with another machine. Next Page >

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