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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Depending on manufacturer and model, grapples are made with solid tines or with tines constructed in a box design for added strength and rigidity.

Some grapples have mounting brackets and pivot points that are independent of the bucket pins. When the attachment is unhooked, the two halves stay together, eliminating the need to re-assemble the grapple when remounting them on the machine.

In addition to grapples that are mounted in a fixed position on the end of the dipper stick, a grapple that rotates 360-degrees offers added versatility.

“It allows you to place the grapple in the best position to pick up a rock, pole, log, or other object regardless of the position of the excavator boom and dipper stick in relation to the object,” says Mark Shukla, director of marketing for Rotobec Inc., which makes a line of grapples and hydraulic rotator systems for these machines. “This type is extremely useful for saving time and effort in complex material handling situations.”

Choices include two styles of rotating grapples. The positioned-type of rotating grapple can be mounted directly on the bucket pins, the most common option. “It provides the ultimate material handling attachment solution,” Shukla says. Other positioned-type models can be mounted using either a pin-grabbing coupler or a wedge-type coupler.

The dangling style rotation grapple offers excellent operating versatility, he notes.

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“This style of grapple hangs off a yoke on the dipper stick to move freely forward and backward and side to side, giving you a great deal of control in picking up and placing objects,” Shukla explains. “Either style of grapple will handle jobs like placing rocks for a retaining wall or loading logs into a truck,” he says. “However, in cases where you need to control the attitude or pitch of the grapple in addition to its height above ground, such as a demolition project, the positioned style lets you tilt the grapple to get a better grip on an object the first time.”

Durability Difference
Much of the durability of a thumb or a grapple reflects the quality of materials used to build the attachment. The better ones are made of higher-grade steel, like AR400 or T1, which offer more strength and wear resistance than a lighter grade, such as A36. Other keys to longer life and lower maintenance costs are heavy-duty cylinders; large-diameter, case-hardened pins and bushings; and heavy gussets. Next Page >

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