Posts tagged: Backhoes

Backhoes Basics

By , February 4, 2010

The great, lumbering back hoes are not always the best choice, especially for the smaller contractor and aren’t a choice at all for the home owner who wants to hire a device for the weekend.  For them, there are mini backhoes or the small back hoes.  If you are going down to the local heavy apparatus rental store, you are likely to see a couple of the different compact back hoes there, typically the most popular brands like John Deere and the Kubota back hoe.  There are others, including the Ford back hoe, the Case back hoe and the JCB back hoe also though there might not be a huge selection of brand names in most rental places. 

For those home contractors or weekend warriors who do not know : a back hoe has that name because it shovels dirt backwards rather than pushing it forward like other types of machinery.  The first models were developed in the UK in the 1950′s and were quickly changed and changed for a number of uses.  They’re all fundamentally built in a similar manner, with a digging bucket at the end of an articulated arm.  This arm can move to the right and left to some level.  As well as the digging bucket, there are other attachments that can be used with the back hoe. 

If you are hiring a back hoe for a home project of most sizes, you will be having a look at a mini, a little or compact back hoe rather than the bigger, more complex models intended to be handled by the highly skilled pro.  Despite their name, these are still sort of big machines and there should be some great caution before you decide whether you are going to be in a position to safely and competently handle them.  Of course , it may be cheaper to hire a contractor to come in and do the digging for your project than it would be to correct and replace all of the things that you tear up, knock down or bowl over trying to learn how to deal with the back hoe that you have just rented. 

In the end, whether you have leased a John Deere or Case back hoe, or any other, you still need to know the way to use it and use it correctly .  Take the time to learn in the lot before you even put your money down.  There is no sense in paying for something you cannot handle once it gets to your lot.  Figure in the price of hauling or delivering the back hoe when you compare the cost of hiring a contractor to the cost of renting and doing it yourself.  What might take you all weekend to do, may only take the contractor an hour making the professional the less expensive option.  If you’re looking at hiring a contractor for 300 greenbacks an hour, or the same price for all day with the back hoe, you are not saving any cash by renting particularly if you end up paying for delivery, additional charges for a second day or finish up having to pay the contractor to come in and finish what you have started when you realize that you don’t know what you do.

Go to Backhoes to get free information on this product. This website will give you all of the information you need on Backhoes along with a lot of other free information. Don’t miss out on this new website if you are looking for a new machine.

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