January-February 2009

More Work, Less Effort

When a bucket alone can’t handle the job, look for a thumb, a grapple, or a hybrid attachment to help you seize the moment.

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By Greg Northcutt

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Thumb Versus Grapple
Another time-and-money-saving attachment for handling various types of materials is the grapple. Instead of a bucket, it features two sets of finger-like tines that let you efficiently clutch and load bulky land-clearing debris, chunks of concrete, and tangled rebar from demolition projects, boosting productivity.

Generally, grapples are used for more specialized applications, such as handling brush, demolition material, or scrap metal, where no digging is required. By contrast, thumbs offer more versatility. “A thumb is great when the job requires going back and forth between digging and material handling, because the bucket can still be used for excavation work without having to remove the thumb,” says Chris Nichols, general manager of Aim Attachments.

The thumb is something of “a poor man’s grapple,” according to Tracy Black, operations manager for Kenco. “It’s significantly cheaper than a grapple, and it doesn’t take a lot of work to install. However, you can’t pick up as much material with a thumb as you can with a grapple. Some guys who do light demolition, like a garage or a house, prefer the thumb because it’s quick and easy to mount in its bracket. For tearing down larger buildings, though, a grapple is usually a better way to go, because it can handle more material faster. Other operators will dedicate one machine for use with a grapple on demolition jobs and use buckets and thumbs on their other machines for the rest of their work.”

Photo Helac
Helac's multipurpose Power Grip fits excavators and backhoes with extendable dipper sticks.
Peter Baumann, sales manager for Weldco-Beales Manufacturing Corp., reports regional differences in popularity between these two types of attachments depending. “Grapples are pretty much used throughout North America,” he says. “However, use of thumbs is much higher west of the Rockies than to the east, where many equipment owners and operators aren’t aware of the benefits of thumbs in saving time and labor. For example, one operator can use a compact excavator, bucket, and thumb to set rock for building a retaining wall in about half the time it would take another operator using the same machine and bucket without thumb and two or three guys on the ground to move the rocks around.”

Thumb Styles
Thumbs are available in several styles that differ in terms of ease of use, size of opening between the thumb and the bucket, and price.

A rigid or stiff-arm thumb is normally welded to the underside of the dipper with an independent main pin. The lowest in price, it offers two or three working positions. Typically, they’re mounted at an angle between about 90 degrees and 120 degrees to the stick. This angle can be adjusted manually by sliding one end of the thumb along a bar or mounting bracket welded to the stick and pinning it to the bar through one of several holes. Some require removing the thumb from the bracket when not in use. Others are designed so that the thumb folds back and is secured out the way against the stick.

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In the case of a hydraulic thumb, the hydraulic cylinder is pinned directly to the thumb. This allows the thumb to rotate from about 135 degrees to 160 degrees, depending on manufacturer, to offer more options for clamping onto an object and folding back much farther than a rigid thumb.

“This style is very easy to install,” says Bo Pratt, sales manger for Rockland Manufacturing. “It gives you more precision than a rigid thumb for handling objects like large stones to minimize any scarring. Also, unlike a rigid thumb, you can use it at maximum reach of the machine.” Next Page >

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