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What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?

Steve


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On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote Re Backhoe rates:

What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?

Steve


It depends on how many hours. For a 1-hour job, about $150. For a
full day or more, about $75/hour.

This is in Lauderdale County, North West Alabama.
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"Steve B" wrote in message
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What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?

Steve


That is like "what does a car cost to buy"!

What type of backhoe, a tractor mount, or a micro backhoe, mini, small,
medium, large, extra large, they come in all sizes. Also how far is it being
floated to the job? What they cost in my area of the world, will have little
bearing on prices in other areas.

Try the tried and true method -- call some excavation companies and get some
comparative quotes.

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On May 30, 12:29*pm, "Steve B" wrote:
What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?

Steve


Don't know about Backhoe's but it looks like a regular Hoe goes for
about $125/hr on Craigslist.

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On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:

What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?


Does it/they need to painted yeller?


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On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:

What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?


Idiotic answers snipped.

If you are just stupid, and don't know the answer, the best thing is to post
nothing at all. At least that way, you may still appear knowledgeable. But
by posting drivel, you remove all doubt.

A backhoe and operator in my neighborhood goes for fifty to one hundred
dollars an hour, depending on the size of the backhoe, and the length of the
job. I was just curious as to what the prices were in other places.

Steve

visit my blog at http://cabgbypasssurgery.com watch for the book

A fool shows his annoyance at once, but a prudent man overlooks an insult.



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"Steve B" wrote in message
...


On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:

What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?


Idiotic answers snipped.

If you are just stupid, and don't know the answer, the best thing is to
post nothing at all. At least that way, you may still appear
knowledgeable. But by posting drivel, you remove all doubt.

A backhoe and operator in my neighborhood goes for fifty to one hundred
dollars an hour, depending on the size of the backhoe, and the length of
the job. I was just curious as to what the prices were in other places.


In my heighborhood one cannot rent a quarter of a million dollar backhoe and
a competent operator for $50 to $150 per hour. Possibly an old broken down
machine and an inexperienced operator or illegal operator would work for
that rate. I have had to pay $750.00 per 8 hour day for a mini backhoe and
run it myself.

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EXT wrote:

"Steve B" wrote in message
...


On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:

What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?


Idiotic answers snipped.

If you are just stupid, and don't know the answer, the best thing is
to post nothing at all. At least that way, you may still appear
knowledgeable. But by posting drivel, you remove all doubt.

A backhoe and operator in my neighborhood goes for fifty to one
hundred dollars an hour, depending on the size of the backhoe, and the
length of the job. I was just curious as to what the prices were in
other places.


In my heighborhood one cannot rent a quarter of a million dollar backhoe
and a competent operator for $50 to $150 per hour. Possibly an old
broken down machine and an inexperienced operator or illegal operator
would work for that rate. I have had to pay $750.00 per 8 hour day for a
mini backhoe and run it myself.


Must be one hell of a backhoe for a quarter-mil. (more like a
crawler-excavator?) Around here, the sizes used for residential work
(hung off the back of a rubber-tired tractor with a front bucket), even
the fancy ones, top out at under 100k. And since they last damn near
forever if you take care of them, serviceable ones can be found for
around half that.

And isn't backhoe work usually priced by the job, not by the hour?
(Barring unexpectedly hitting ledge or a gas main or something, of course.)

--
aem sends...
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"EXT" wrote:


"Steve B" wrote in message
...

-snip-

A backhoe and operator in my neighborhood goes for fifty to one hundred
dollars an hour, depending on the size of the backhoe, and the length of
the job. I was just curious as to what the prices were in other places.


In my heighborhood one cannot rent a quarter of a million dollar backhoe and
a competent operator for $50 to $150 per hour. Possibly an old broken down
machine and an inexperienced operator or illegal operator would work for
that rate. I have had to pay $750.00 per 8 hour day for a mini backhoe and
run it myself.


Don't know about the operator any more-- but a few years back I rented
a hoe to re-do my foundation. $300 delivered for a 24 hour day. The
guy dropped it off at 7pm & was back 7pm the next night. I only put
16 hours on it- but if I was younger and had kept it going 24 the cost
was the same.

This was a 1yr old machine in good repair from a True Value hardware
store. Couldn't tell you how big it was but it had no trouble getting
down to the footers along side my house- about 7' below grade.

Jim
[near Schenectady, NY]
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"aemeijers" wrote in message
...
EXT wrote:

"Steve B" wrote in message
...


On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:

What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?

Idiotic answers snipped.

If you are just stupid, and don't know the answer, the best thing is to
post nothing at all. At least that way, you may still appear
knowledgeable. But by posting drivel, you remove all doubt.

A backhoe and operator in my neighborhood goes for fifty to one hundred
dollars an hour, depending on the size of the backhoe, and the length of
the job. I was just curious as to what the prices were in other places.


In my heighborhood one cannot rent a quarter of a million dollar backhoe
and a competent operator for $50 to $150 per hour. Possibly an old broken
down machine and an inexperienced operator or illegal operator would work
for that rate. I have had to pay $750.00 per 8 hour day for a mini
backhoe and run it myself.


Must be one hell of a backhoe for a quarter-mil. (more like a
crawler-excavator?) Around here, the sizes used for residential work (hung
off the back of a rubber-tired tractor with a front bucket), even the
fancy ones, top out at under 100k. And since they last damn near forever
if you take care of them, serviceable ones can be found for around half
that.

And isn't backhoe work usually priced by the job, not by the hour?
(Barring unexpectedly hitting ledge or a gas main or something, of
course.)

--
aem sends...


I can tell that EXT, who I have filtered, knows nothing about nothing. In
my neighborhood right now, a decent brand name backhoe goes for $30,000.
The Ritchie Bros. equipment auction coming up in Vegas has them cheaper than
that. Buyer beware, and all that, but some clean low hours units go through
there regularly for the $30k range.

$250,000 backhoe? Could you please cite one, EXT?

No?

I thought so.

Now, maybe a larger track hoe.

Steve

visit my blog at http://cabgbypasssurgery.com

A fool shows his annoyance at once, but a prudent man overlooks an insult.





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Steve B wrote:
On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:

What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?


Idiotic answers snipped.

If you are just stupid, and don't know the answer, the best thing is to post
nothing at all. At least that way, you may still appear knowledgeable. But
by posting drivel, you remove all doubt.

A backhoe and operator in my neighborhood goes for fifty to one hundred
dollars an hour, depending on the size of the backhoe, and the length of the
job. I was just curious as to what the prices were in other places.

Steve


I had a medium sized excavator here and for 8 hours work he charged me
around $900. He gave me a big break for unexpected time digging out 2
stumps. I told him there was fill over the one stump but I didn't know
how deep it was buried, it was done before I moved here. He told me he
was the one who did the last job and didn't think the tree was buried
very deep. Turns out he dug over 6' before finding the roots then had
to go another 6' to get it out. He didn't have to give me such a break
but it was nice of him. I ended up having him deliver almost 200 ton of
fill because I'm on a mountain and I wanted a little more flat land
around the garage. The fill was free, delivery was $125 for each of 9
loads. He wasn't making much on the delivery either, climbing up the
mountain with 22 ton of fill. He's making money on the land he bought.
It was practically worthless, a very steep grade right off the
highway. To much for a driveway and a building. Now it's almost flat
and becoming a prime commercial property.

A couple times I rented a small underpowered 4 wheel drive Kubota
backhoe/loader. I think it's the smallest one they make. Around $120
for 8 hours on the meter and have it returned clean within 24 hours. I
towed it on their trailer. The thing is a piece of crap and between
being short on power the bucket is so small it takes forever to get
anything done. I believe the next size or so up is more like a "real"
Kubota.
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"Tony" wrote in message
...
Steve B wrote:
On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:

What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?


Idiotic answers snipped.

If you are just stupid, and don't know the answer, the best thing is to
post nothing at all. At least that way, you may still appear
knowledgeable. But by posting drivel, you remove all doubt.

A backhoe and operator in my neighborhood goes for fifty to one hundred
dollars an hour, depending on the size of the backhoe, and the length of
the job. I was just curious as to what the prices were in other places.

Steve


I had a medium sized excavator here and for 8 hours work he charged me
around $900. He gave me a big break for unexpected time digging out 2
stumps. I told him there was fill over the one stump but I didn't know
how deep it was buried, it was done before I moved here. He told me he
was the one who did the last job and didn't think the tree was buried very
deep. Turns out he dug over 6' before finding the roots then had to go
another 6' to get it out. He didn't have to give me such a break but it
was nice of him. I ended up having him deliver almost 200 ton of fill
because I'm on a mountain and I wanted a little more flat land around the
garage. The fill was free, delivery was $125 for each of 9 loads. He
wasn't making much on the delivery either, climbing up the mountain with
22 ton of fill. He's making money on the land he bought. It was
practically worthless, a very steep grade right off the highway. To much
for a driveway and a building. Now it's almost flat and becoming a prime
commercial property.

A couple times I rented a small underpowered 4 wheel drive Kubota
backhoe/loader. I think it's the smallest one they make. Around $120 for
8 hours on the meter and have it returned clean within 24 hours. I towed
it on their trailer. The thing is a piece of crap and between being short
on power the bucket is so small it takes forever to get anything done. I
believe the next size or so up is more like a "real" Kubota.


Thank you for the intelligent knowledgeable experienced based answer.

Steve

visit my blog at http://cabgbypasssurgery.com

A fool shows his annoyance at once, but a prudent man overlooks an insult.




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Default Backhoe rates

On Jun 1, 10:03*am, "Steve B" wrote:
"Tony" wrote in message

...





Steve B wrote:
On Sun, 30 May 2010 09:29:32 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:


What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?


Idiotic answers snipped.


If you are just stupid, and don't know the answer, the best thing is to
post nothing at all. *At least that way, you may still appear
knowledgeable. *But by posting drivel, you remove all doubt.


A backhoe and operator in my neighborhood goes for fifty to one hundred
dollars an hour, depending on the size of the backhoe, and the length of
the job. *I was just curious as to what the prices were in other places.


Steve


I had a medium sized excavator here and for 8 hours work he charged me
around $900. *He gave me a big break for unexpected time digging out 2
stumps. *I told him there was fill over the one stump but I didn't know
how deep it was buried, it was done before I moved here. *He told me he
was the one who did the last job and didn't think the tree was buried very
deep. *Turns out he dug over 6' before finding the roots then had to go
another 6' to get it out. *He didn't have to give me such a break but it
was nice of him. *I ended up having him deliver almost 200 ton of fill
because I'm on a mountain and I wanted a little more flat land around the
garage. *The fill was free, delivery was $125 for each of 9 loads. *He
wasn't making much on the delivery either, climbing up the mountain with
22 ton of fill. *He's making money on the land he bought. It was
practically worthless, a very steep grade right off the highway. *To much
for a driveway and a building. *Now it's almost flat and becoming a prime
commercial property.


A couple times I rented a small underpowered 4 wheel drive Kubota
backhoe/loader. *I think it's the smallest one they make. *Around $120 for
8 hours on the meter and have it returned clean within 24 hours. *I towed
it on their trailer. *The thing is a piece of crap and between being short
on power the bucket is so small it takes forever to get anything done. *I
believe the next size or so up is more like a "real" Kubota.


Thank you for the intelligent knowledgeable experienced based answer.

Steve

visit my blog athttp://cabgbypasssurgery.com

A fool shows his annoyance at once, but a prudent man overlooks an insult..- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


I'd agree with the $150 an hour for a moderate sized piece of
equipment that's going to be for several hours. Homeowner sized
equipment rents for $250 or thereabout a day. I did get one guy to
agree to $75 an hour for moving some fill but he was an independent
guy that owned his own dump, trailer, and small loader.
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On May 30, 12:29�pm, "Steve B" wrote:
What does a backhoe and operator run an hour where you live?

Steve


Like others have said.....it depends on the size of the equipment
needed, possibility of hitting a gas/water/etc and the size of the job
at hand.

Don't be confused by "cost per hour". Some will work real slow and
others real fast. Get an estimate and credentials. Getting a permit
will almost insure a good job. Pay by the job, not the hour.

Hank
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