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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“Before K-Tec started up, we were renting the scrapers ourselves, but those were too small. With the price of fuel, of tractors, and the availability of larger horsepower machines, the K-Tec really became a viable option for us. We could haul 36 yards with just one operator, whereas with an 18-yard scraper you really only get 12 to 14 yards. With the K-Tec you can actually push them and get completely full loads. You can’t strike a completely full load in any scraper. So if you push them along a bit they will load up that last 20% and you’re getting that extra bit for free.”

When Scraping’s Really a Drag
Dixon, IL–based Bonnell Industries Inc. produces road drag units constructed mainly for municipal or other large contractors. Though technically not construction scrapers, they do move gravel and material. The company’s smallest model, the 272, requires a minimum of 60 horsepower. Many users pull them with a large plow truck. They don’t have a unit quite small enough to be pulled with a pickup or garden tractor.

Bonnell has three models with eight different variations. They are a good fit for all the different maintenance needing to be done on gravel roads and parking lots, according to Dave Foulker, national sales manager for Bonnell.

“Anywhere that has gravel or loose material that needs to be maintained, including state and federal parks or conservation areas where we have many units in use, is a good fit for our equipment,” says Foulker. “In many of these same areas, volunteer help is used. Those individuals are able to drive a tractor to pull the drag units, so there is no need for them to drive or use a motor grader.”

Photo: Caterpillar
Caterpillar's TS225 scrapers are equipped with lift cylinders at the end of the bowl, allowing an operator to adjust the cutting angle to handle a variety of different loading conditions.
Photo: Hoelscher
Hoelscher’s compact models are ideal for negotiating tight turns and corners.
Bonnell has also recently developed new piece of equipment called the Shoulder Conditioner for maintaining the shoulder of the road. Whether concrete or asphalt, when the loose material at the shoulder of the road, whether concrete or asphalt, gets eroded away or tire rutted, the equipment works it away from the shoulder. It also reclaims the gravel present, bringing it back to the road surface and grooming it out for safer travel, according to Joe Bonnell, president of Bonnell Inc.

“Currently, our customers may accomplish this with three vehicles,” adds Bonnell. “They’ll have a tractor with a disk to stir up the packed material, followed by a tractor with a blade on it to blade it back in. That action in turn is followed by a broom attachment to groom the material back off the painted white line of the road; all this is done with just one vehicle. We developed the Shoulder Conditioner in 2007, so it’s new to the marketplace.”

Bonnell’s first snowplow was constructed 45 years ago. The company has been making its road drags for some time, as well. “Our founder observed what some of the counties and townships were doing and using to maintain the gravel roads,” adds Foulker. “He realized they needed something better than the old converted horse-drawn graders or discarded bedsprings to maintain gravel roads. Bonnell, with the help of the people doing the maintenance, built the company’s first road drag.”

Just off the Drawing Board
Towed scrapers from Caterpillar Inc. strip topsoil and move the loose materials of the A to mid-B horizon soils in work settings that range from road construction and site preparation to landfill construction.

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Cat’s line of towed scrapers brings several new things to the market, according to Dan Bruch, hauling systems marketing representative for Caterpillar. “The Cat scraper bowl uses a cellular design that provides incredible strength and dent resistance. The bowl interior walls, floor, ejector, and apron face are constructed from high-strength, abrasion-resistant steel for maximum wear resistance. The scraper floor is constructed from a box-section design that gives it strength during top loading and structural rigidity during intermittent push loading.

“With job-site safety a top concern for all contractors, Cat’s towed scrapers have hydraulically actuated dry-disc brakes as standard equipment. They are the same brakes that have been used on some Cat articulated trucks for effective stopping power.” Next Page >

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