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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Avid readers of this ng will know that I am on the lookout for a cheap
digger but I remain undecided as to the type to buy and could do with some impartial expert advice on the subject. The more I think about it the more I think a mini digger will best suit what I have to but I still have some doubts on various aspects. I have decided to up my budget to £3000 but that is still very much the bottom end of the market, particularly for a mini digger. With a full size digger the choice is really which particular JCB but there is a bewildering range of mini diggers from a considerable number of manufacturers so I would like to know which manufacturers have a reputation for reliability or perhaps more pertinently which manufacturers to avoid. I don't suppose the machine will ever be used outside my smallholding and my neighbours farm but even that might require moving the machine half a mile so is it realistic to expect a mini digger to travel such a distance under its own power or do I need to budget for a trailer as well? And then there is the question of stability on steep ground. Most mini diggers seem to have no stabilisers and some of them have a very narrow track so is a certain minimum track advisable? And if so what? And finally any particular recommendations. -- Roger Chapman |
#2
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In message , Roger
writes Avid readers of this ng will know that I am on the lookout for a cheap digger but I remain undecided as to the type to buy and could do with some impartial expert advice on the subject. The more I think about it the more I think a mini digger will best suit what I have to but I still have some doubts on various aspects. I have decided to up my budget to £3000 but that is still very much the bottom end of the market, particularly for a mini digger. I would have offered my JCB 3D but you said distance costs:-) Anything that old is not going to cheer up any elfin safety person so you are restricted to own jobs. The ability to move muck 1 ton at a time may not be an enormous benefit if you do not have the space to manoeuvre a large machine. With a full size digger the choice is really which particular JCB but there is a bewildering range of mini diggers from a considerable number of manufacturers so I would like to know which manufacturers have a reputation for reliability or perhaps more pertinently which manufacturers to avoid. Can't answer that but you might factor in the value of a 4 in 1 bucket for levelling/scraping and the forks for any pallet work. I don't think you get either with a mini. regards -- Tim Lamb |
#3
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The message
from Tim Lamb contains these words: I have decided to up my budget to £3000 but that is still very much the bottom end of the market, particularly for a mini digger. I would have offered my JCB 3D but you said distance costs:-) Don't tempt me. IIRC you are somewhere like Shropshire. 150 @£3/mile is 10% of the increased budget gone. (Incidentally I don't understand the difference between a 3C and a 3D). Anything that old is not going to cheer up any elfin safety person so you are restricted to own jobs. The ability to move muck 1 ton at a time may not be an enormous benefit if you do not have the space to manoeuvre a large machine. With a full size digger the choice is really which particular JCB but there is a bewildering range of mini diggers from a considerable number of manufacturers so I would like to know which manufacturers have a reputation for reliability or perhaps more pertinently which manufacturers to avoid. Can't answer that but you might factor in the value of a 4 in 1 bucket for levelling/scraping and the forks for any pallet work. I don't think you get either with a mini. I do have access to a Zetor tractor with a bucket on its front lift. No good for digging and will only shovel loose stuff but much better than the wheelbarrow and shovel alternative. Some mini diggers have a dozer blade which presumably is some help levelling even if they might not have enough weight to shift anything well compacted. -- Roger Chapman |
#4
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Roger wrote:
The message from Tim Lamb contains these words: I have decided to up my budget to £3000 but that is still very much the bottom end of the market, particularly for a mini digger. I would have offered my JCB 3D but you said distance costs:-) Don't tempt me. IIRC you are somewhere like Shropshire. 150 @£3/mile is 10% of the increased budget gone. (Incidentally I don't understand the difference between a 3C and a 3D). Anything that old is not going to cheer up any elfin safety person so you are restricted to own jobs. The ability to move muck 1 ton at a time may not be an enormous benefit if you do not have the space to manoeuvre a large machine. With a full size digger the choice is really which particular JCB but there is a bewildering range of mini diggers from a considerable number of manufacturers so I would like to know which manufacturers have a reputation for reliability or perhaps more pertinently which manufacturers to avoid. Can't answer that but you might factor in the value of a 4 in 1 bucket for levelling/scraping and the forks for any pallet work. I don't think you get either with a mini. I do have access to a Zetor tractor with a bucket on its front lift. No good for digging and will only shovel loose stuff but much better than the wheelbarrow and shovel alternative. Some mini diggers have a dozer blade which presumably is some help levelling even if they might not have enough weight to shift anything well compacted. Ive done extensive levelling with minis and a 3.5 tonner. The blade sort of works, but you end up digging the big humps out and spreading. I.e. none have the tractio to really BULLDOZE. what a big digger will do that a mini cant is - go deeper. Ponds are not much use if they are only a few inches deep. - lift heavier. if pu are diggong rock and masonry it may not come in pint sized chunks - pull up bigger Trtee roots work well with a digger, but there is a size limit. What a little digger will do that a big one cant is get into small spaces, and fall over. Its a great way to dig a garden bed over though. There's just as much o go wrong on a little one as a big one, and it all costs about the same. Except the tracks. They cost more on the big *******s. Go for the biggest you can fit. |
#5
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In message , Roger
writes The message from Tim Lamb contains these words: I have decided to up my budget to £3000 but that is still very much the bottom end of the market, particularly for a mini digger. I would have offered my JCB 3D but you said distance costs:-) Don't tempt me. IIRC you are somewhere like Shropshire. 150 @£3/mile is 10% of the increased budget gone. (Incidentally I don't understand the difference between a 3C and a 3D). Herts. Extending dipper and (this one) has the kit for a hydraulic breaker. Very tired. It currently has a problem with the power shuttle anyway and I am too busy to fix. Lots of abraded hoses! regards -- Tim Lamb |
#6
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The message
from Tim Lamb contains these words: I would have offered my JCB 3D but you said distance costs:-) Don't tempt me. IIRC you are somewhere like Shropshire. 150 @£3/mile is 10% of the increased budget gone. (Incidentally I don't understand the difference between a 3C and a 3D). Herts. Extending dipper and (this one) has the kit for a hydraulic breaker. Very tired. It currently has a problem with the power shuttle anyway and I am too busy to fix. Lots of abraded hoses! Even worse. That's almost 200 miles away and, being a novice at this, I do want a reliable machine. -- Roger Chapman |
#7
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Roger wrote:
The message from Tim Lamb contains these words: I would have offered my JCB 3D but you said distance costs:-) Don't tempt me. IIRC you are somewhere like Shropshire. 150 @£3/mile is 10% of the increased budget gone. (Incidentally I don't understand the difference between a 3C and a 3D). Herts. Extending dipper and (this one) has the kit for a hydraulic breaker. Very tired. It currently has a problem with the power shuttle anyway and I am too busy to fix. Lots of abraded hoses! Even worse. That's almost 200 miles away and, being a novice at this, I do want a reliable machine. Then hire one. 3-4 grand buys a lot of hire time. |
#8
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In message , Roger
writes The message from Tim Lamb contains these words: I would have offered my JCB 3D but you said distance costs:-) Don't tempt me. IIRC you are somewhere like Shropshire. 150 @£3/mile is 10% of the increased budget gone. (Incidentally I don't understand the difference between a 3C and a 3D). Herts. Extending dipper and (this one) has the kit for a hydraulic breaker. Very tired. It currently has a problem with the power shuttle anyway and I am too busy to fix. Lots of abraded hoses! Even worse. That's almost 200 miles away and, being a novice at this, I do want a reliable machine. Yes. You'll note my laid back sales technique:-) IME you only desperately want a digger when you have not got one. In practice, I have a Manitou all terrain forklift which does all the pallet and loading work. I have access to a Steelfab wheeled mini digger for small jobs and use a local (MF digger) driver for anything tricky so actual use of the 3D comes down to pushing in fence posts, digging holes and occupying space in the barns. Had you considered hiring a *bucket chain* type trencher for your pipelaying job? regards -- Tim Lamb |
#9
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![]() "Roger" wrote in message k... Avid readers of this ng will know that I am on the lookout for a cheap digger but I remain undecided as to the type to buy and could do with some impartial expert advice on the subject. The more I think about it the more I think a mini digger will best suit what I have to but I still have some doubts on various aspects. I have decided to up my budget to £3000 but that is still very much the bottom end of the market, particularly for a mini digger. With a full size digger the choice is really which particular JCB but there is a bewildering range of mini diggers from a considerable number of manufacturers so I would like to know which manufacturers have a reputation for reliability or perhaps more pertinently which manufacturers to avoid. I don't suppose the machine will ever be used outside my smallholding and my neighbours farm but even that might require moving the machine half a mile so is it realistic to expect a mini digger to travel such a distance under its own power or do I need to budget for a trailer as well? And then there is the question of stability on steep ground. Most mini diggers seem to have no stabilisers and some of them have a very narrow track so is a certain minimum track advisable? And if so what? And finally any particular recommendations. Roger, I too am interested in this topic. I have a couple of comments: - I recently seriously toyed with the idea of getting an old JCB (one was going cheap nearby), but decided against it, as the thought of a JCB with wheels on my muddy fields was a bit of a nightmare. (SWMBO's hysterical laughter at the suggestion follow by a "oh, you were serious" didn't help). I decided in the end that if I do get something it will - be small (not blumming enormous like a JCB) - have tracks. - If you're lending the digger out to neighbours, could you expect the neighbours to sort out the travel arrangements? (And if you're just going 1/2 mile down the road do you really care about having a _decent_ transport solution?) Piers |
#10
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The message
from "Piers Finlayson" contains these words: I too am interested in this topic. I have a couple of comments: - I recently seriously toyed with the idea of getting an old JCB (one was going cheap nearby), but decided against it, as the thought of a JCB with wheels on my muddy fields was a bit of a nightmare. (SWMBO's hysterical laughter at the suggestion follow by a "oh, you were serious" didn't help). I decided in the end that if I do get something it will - be small (not blumming enormous like a JCB) - have tracks. I have also wondered what would happen with something as heavy as a full size JCB on soft ground. I don't know for sure how much they weigh but one advert claimed 7 tons which must be at least twice the weight of my neighbours tractor. - If you're lending the digger out to neighbours, could you expect the neighbours to sort out the travel arrangements? (And if you're just going 1/2 mile down the road do you really care about having a _decent_ transport solution?) Not thinking about going on the road at all. That was half a mile across the fields and it would be me doing the driving, not my elderly neighbour who won't even drive his own tractor. What I am concerned about is wearing out the tracks unnecessarily and dying of boredom getting to the other side of his farm and back again. I have only ever seen mini diggers move at a snails pace. Being retired myself I have plenty of time to help out but life is too short to spend half a day travelling half a mile. :-) -- Roger Chapman |
#11
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"Roger" wrote in message
k... The message from "Piers Finlayson" contains these words: I too am interested in this topic. I have a couple of comments: - I recently seriously toyed with the idea of getting an old JCB (one was going cheap nearby), but decided against it, as the thought of a JCB with wheels on my muddy fields was a bit of a nightmare. (SWMBO's hysterical laughter at the suggestion follow by a "oh, you were serious" didn't help). I decided in the end that if I do get something it will - be small (not blumming enormous like a JCB) - have tracks. I have also wondered what would happen with something as heavy as a full size JCB on soft ground. I don't know for sure how much they weigh but one advert claimed 7 tons which must be at least twice the weight of my neighbours tractor. - If you're lending the digger out to neighbours, could you expect the neighbours to sort out the travel arrangements? (And if you're just going 1/2 mile down the road do you really care about having a _decent_ transport solution?) Not thinking about going on the road at all. That was half a mile across the fields and it would be me doing the driving, not my elderly neighbour who won't even drive his own tractor. What I am concerned about is wearing out the tracks unnecessarily and dying of boredom getting to the other side of his farm and back again. I have only ever seen mini diggers move at a snails pace. Being retired myself I have plenty of time to help out but life is too short to spend half a day travelling half a mile. :-) You want a Bobcat! See: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CHRa...eature=related or just type "bobcat youtube" into Google -- Bob Mannix (anti-spam is as easy as 1-2-3 - not) |
#12
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The message
from "Bob Mannix" contains these words: You want a Bobcat! See: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CHRa...eature=related Oh no I don't. I like a quiet life. :-) I also want to dig trenches. -- Roger Chapman |
#13
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"Roger" wrote in message
k... The message from "Bob Mannix" contains these words: You want a Bobcat! See: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CHRa...eature=related Oh no I don't. I like a quiet life. :-) I also want to dig trenches. Oh they do a digger/tracked version - can't do the acrobatics though -- Bob Mannix (anti-spam is as easy as 1-2-3 - not) |
#14
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Roger wrote:
The message from "Piers Finlayson" contains these words: I too am interested in this topic. I have a couple of comments: - I recently seriously toyed with the idea of getting an old JCB (one was going cheap nearby), but decided against it, as the thought of a JCB with wheels on my muddy fields was a bit of a nightmare. (SWMBO's hysterical laughter at the suggestion follow by a "oh, you were serious" didn't help). I decided in the end that if I do get something it will - be small (not blumming enormous like a JCB) - have tracks. I have also wondered what would happen with something as heavy as a full size JCB on soft ground. I don't know for sure how much they weigh but one advert claimed 7 tons which must be at least twice the weight of my neighbours tractor. - If you're lending the digger out to neighbours, could you expect the neighbours to sort out the travel arrangements? (And if you're just going 1/2 mile down the road do you really care about having a _decent_ transport solution?) Not thinking about going on the road at all. That was half a mile across the fields and it would be me doing the driving, not my elderly neighbour who won't even drive his own tractor. What I am concerned about is wearing out the tracks unnecessarily and dying of boredom getting to the other side of his farm and back again. I have only ever seen mini diggers move at a snails pace. Being retired myself I have plenty of time to help out but life is too short to spend half a day travelling half a mile. :-) Any tracked digger I have hired moves at a walking pace only. 3mph roughly. So abut ten minutes to do half a mile. They aren't designed to tavel. They are designed to dig, oddly enough. |
#15
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The message
from The Natural Philosopher contains these words: Any tracked digger I have hired moves at a walking pace only. 3mph roughly. I have seen several at work and none seemed anywhere near that fast. So abut ten minutes to do half a mile. They aren't designed to tavel. They are designed to dig, oddly enough. Hence the query about needing to budget for a trailer as well. I could use my neighbours tractor to tow it around. -- Roger Chapman |
#16
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In message , Roger
writes The message from The Natural Philosopher contains these words: They aren't designed to tavel. They are designed to dig, oddly enough. Hence the query about needing to budget for a trailer as well. I could use my neighbours tractor to tow it around. How about an old caravan chassis? Old caravans are fairly often available via Freecyclye. My own trailer is a basic caravan chassis, comprising the original angle iron (?) frame, with boards (the original caravan floor) on top. The load bed is 10' 8" by 6' 4", although I have no idea which type of caravan it came from, as I didn't complete the conversion myself. Conversion is too strong a word - it is really just whatever was left when everything above floor level was ripped off. Mine managed 500 miles from Aberdeenshire to Hertfordshire, then back again with a Morris Minor on board, without any problems. Just needed a light board, which was screwed to the rear. I did arrive home minus one mudguard, though :-) I would think something similar would be ideal for towing a mini digger across a field with a tractor, perhaps running the trailer wheels on lower than normal tyre pressure. -- Graeme |
#17
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![]() "Roger" wrote in message k... The message from "Piers Finlayson" contains these words: I too am interested in this topic. I have a couple of comments: - I recently seriously toyed with the idea of getting an old JCB (one was going cheap nearby), but decided against it, as the thought of a JCB with wheels on my muddy fields was a bit of a nightmare. (SWMBO's hysterical laughter at the suggestion follow by a "oh, you were serious" didn't help). I decided in the end that if I do get something it will - be small (not blumming enormous like a JCB) - have tracks. I have also wondered what would happen with something as heavy as a full size JCB on soft ground. I don't know for sure how much they weigh but one advert claimed 7 tons which must be at least twice the weight of my neighbours tractor. - If you're lending the digger out to neighbours, could you expect the neighbours to sort out the travel arrangements? (And if you're just going 1/2 mile down the road do you really care about having a _decent_ transport solution?) Not thinking about going on the road at all. That was half a mile across the fields and it would be me doing the driving, not my elderly neighbour who won't even drive his own tractor. What I am concerned about is wearing out the tracks unnecessarily and dying of boredom getting to the other side of his farm and back again. I have only ever seen mini diggers move at a snails pace. Being retired myself I have plenty of time to help out but life is too short to spend half a day travelling half a mile. :-) A friend of mine a few years ago bought a rusty old JCB (cheaply) from a seaside town, drove it 90 miles (Oban to Glasgow!) that was hairy!! used it to dig foundations for an extension, while welding up the cab! sold it and with the profit bought a mini digger which 20 years or so later he still uses. Des |
#18
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In article ,
Roger wrote: I have also wondered what would happen with something as heavy as a full size JCB on soft ground. I don't know for sure how much they weigh but one advert claimed 7 tons which must be at least twice the weight of my neighbours tractor. Not quite the same, but http://www.diggerland.com/visiting/disastergallery.htm has some diggers that appear to have sunk impressively ![]() Darren |
#20
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Roger wrote:
You will need to read my comments in light of the fact that I have only used a few of the smaller machines personally (and talked to a friend who ran a groundwork business so had used a few more). I don't claim any expertise in this area! With a full size digger the choice is really which particular JCB but there is a bewildering range of mini diggers from a considerable number of manufacturers so I would like to know which manufacturers have a reputation for reliability or perhaps more pertinently which manufacturers to avoid. Lots of people seem to like the Yanmar ones - good engines and they seem to punch well above their weight. Many of the local hire places do those and Bobcat as the mainstay of the smaller machine lineup. I don't suppose the machine will ever be used outside my smallholding and my neighbours farm but even that might require moving the machine half a mile so is it realistic to expect a mini digger to travel such a distance under its own power or do I need to budget for a trailer as well? well 3 - 4mph is going to be top whack - so 10 - 15 mins each way. And then there is the question of stability on steep ground. Most mini diggers seem to have no stabilisers and some of them have a very narrow track so is a certain minimum track advisable? And if so what? The smaller machines have a lower centre of gravity as well - however they can certainly *feel* less stable since it only takes a small hill to put you at a steep angle. The ones with a dozer blade can be made significantly more stable by lifting the front of the machine off the ground on that before digging. (or if digging on a slope, have the blade at the lower end and using it to level up the machine). The smallest machines (800kg ish) sometimes have tracks that can be moved in and out to allow access through narrow gaps, but made wider when being used for better stability. And finally any particular recommendations. Bigger machines tend to be smoother and less jerky to operate. The only real attraction of the smaller ones is storage and use in a confined space. I guess if I were keeping one as a pet, a 1.5 to 2 tonne machine would be a good compromise - big enough to do useful work and still small enough to drive through most gates (about 1m wide). If you have the space and don't need the narrow access then something bigger. The classic JCB backhoe loader layout is probably a very versatile all round machine, although probably not as flexible in use for pure digging. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#21
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Roger wrote:
Avid readers of this ng will know that I am on the lookout for a cheap digger but I remain undecided as to the type to buy and could do with some impartial expert advice on the subject. The more I think about it the more I think a mini digger will best suit what I have to but I still have some doubts on various aspects. I have decided to up my budget to £3000 but that is still very much the bottom end of the market, particularly for a mini digger. With a full size digger the choice is really which particular JCB but there is a bewildering range of mini diggers from a considerable number of manufacturers so I would like to know which manufacturers have a reputation for reliability or perhaps more pertinently which manufacturers to avoid. I don't suppose the machine will ever be used outside my smallholding and my neighbours farm but even that might require moving the machine half a mile so is it realistic to expect a mini digger to travel such a distance under its own power or do I need to budget for a trailer as well? And then there is the question of stability on steep ground. Most mini diggers seem to have no stabilisers and some of them have a very narrow track so is a certain minimum track advisable? And if so what? And finally any particular recommendations. You have not said what you want it for. Surely the type of work to which you will put the machine will define which machine you need? And if you don't even say what it is, how can anyone advise you? The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is a JCB for easy availability of spares. Obviously get the newest and best condition that you can afford. The earlier ones were not especially reliable even when new. Anything less than 15 years old is a better bet if you can find one within your price range. Try to get one with a 4-in-1 front bucket as it will doze, load, pick up (clamshell) and act as a forklift, hence 4-in-1. Incredibly versatile. The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is (probably) a Kubota for sheer reliability. Make sure you get one that hasn't been used in heavy civil engineering - tunnelling contractors buy them new and use them until they break, after which they end up on the used market. The mini-excavator can only do two things, one of them badly. It will dig well, with the obvious limitations of shallower maximum digging depth, lower power and smaller bucket size when compared to a JCB. If is fitted with a dozer blade, it will doze extremely badly. Those blades are tiny, and there is very little control - you cannot see what you are doing. But they do add a lot of stability when digging. The tracks are not made for travelling long distances, more for moving around in a small, confined area. Tracking long distances will wear out the tracks very quickly. The tracks are tiny and the bearings are just too small for arduous travel. Track repairs are expensive - it is usually cheaper to fit a service exchange pair of tracks than repair your own but you will get whacked for any damage to the pair you exchange. Wear and tear is accepted but not damage. So a trailer is indicated in order to reduce the distance travelled. As I said before, without any idea of what you want the machine for, it is impossible to recommend one type over the other. But in general, farm/smallholding use would suggest a tractor-based JCB, and work on confined urban sites (or shaft and tunnel digging) would suggest a mini-excavator. In another post you asked what was the difference between a JCB 3C and a 3D. Here's a page that tells you: http://www.classic-combines.com/jcb.html I don't recommend you buy from this company as, while the machines may be within your budget, they sill probably be slightly too small for your needs. ;-) |
#22
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The message
from Bruce contains these words: You have not said what you want it for. Surely the type of work to which you will put the machine will define which machine you need? And if you don't even say what it is, how can anyone advise you? My original draft included details of what I wanted to do but on reading it through I came to the conclusion that I had made the case for a mini digger rather than a full size JCB so I deleted the detail. For some of the work a JCB would be a better bet or just as good but with 2 of the jobs lined up - excavations for a ground based heat pump in the narrow confines of my garden and rescuing a trampled flat drainage ditch among mature trees a full size JCB would make the job much more difficult. First job to be done is to reroute a troublesome land drain. This really needs to be done this year. I need to dig a trench about 80 yards long and I am now too old to do that by hand. The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is a JCB for easy availability of spares. Obviously get the newest and best condition that you can afford. The earlier ones were not especially reliable even when new. Anything less than 15 years old is a better bet if you can find one within your price range. Try to get one with a 4-in-1 front bucket as it will doze, load, pick up (clamshell) and act as a forklift, hence 4-in-1. Incredibly versatile. If I do revert to searching for a JCB I think I would need to up my budget a bit more to get one less than 15 years old. The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is (probably) a Kubota for sheer reliability. Make sure you get one that hasn't been used in heavy civil engineering - tunnelling contractors buy them new and use them until they break, after which they end up on the used market. The mini-excavator can only do two things, one of them badly. It will dig well, with the obvious limitations of shallower maximum digging depth, lower power and smaller bucket size when compared to a JCB. If is fitted with a dozer blade, it will doze extremely badly. Those blades are tiny, and there is very little control - you cannot see what you are doing. But they do add a lot of stability when digging. The tracks are not made for travelling long distances, more for moving around in a small, confined area. Tracking long distances will wear out the tracks very quickly. The tracks are tiny and the bearings are just too small for arduous travel. Track repairs are expensive - it is usually cheaper to fit a service exchange pair of tracks than repair your own but you will get whacked for any damage to the pair you exchange. Wear and tear is accepted but not damage. So a trailer is indicated in order to reduce the distance travelled. That is one of the points that was bothering me and in the end may well make me switch back to a big machine. Mini digger plus trailer is likely to push the budget up to £4000. As I said before, without any idea of what you want the machine for, it is impossible to recommend one type over the other. But in general, farm/smallholding use would suggest a tractor-based JCB, and work on confined urban sites (or shaft and tunnel digging) would suggest a mini-excavator. I live on a steep hillside and the track down the hill on my neighbours farm was originally made for horse and cart (as are some of the original gateways). The track has already been widened but it may need further work to get a JCB down it and at one point it might need re-routing as I am not convinced the shelf cut into the hillside would stand 7 tons and have no wish to go tumbling down a 1 in 1 slope. In another post you asked what was the difference between a JCB 3C and a 3D. Here's a page that tells you: http://www.classic-combines.com/jcb.html I don't recommend you buy from this company as, while the machines may be within your budget, they sill probably be slightly too small for your needs. ;-) Perhaps not. :-) -- Roger Chapman |
#23
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![]() "Roger" wrote in message k... The message from Bruce contains these words: You have not said what you want it for. Surely the type of work to which you will put the machine will define which machine you need? And if you don't even say what it is, how can anyone advise you? My original draft included details of what I wanted to do but on reading it through I came to the conclusion that I had made the case for a mini digger rather than a full size JCB so I deleted the detail. For some of the work a JCB would be a better bet or just as good but with 2 of the jobs lined up - excavations for a ground based heat pump in the narrow confines of my garden and rescuing a trampled flat drainage ditch among mature trees a full size JCB would make the job much more difficult. First job to be done is to reroute a troublesome land drain. This really needs to be done this year. I need to dig a trench about 80 yards long and I am now too old to do that by hand. The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is a JCB for easy availability of spares. Obviously get the newest and best condition that you can afford. The earlier ones were not especially reliable even when new. Anything less than 15 years old is a better bet if you can find one within your price range. Try to get one with a 4-in-1 front bucket as it will doze, load, pick up (clamshell) and act as a forklift, hence 4-in-1. Incredibly versatile. If I do revert to searching for a JCB I think I would need to up my budget a bit more to get one less than 15 years old. The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is (probably) a Kubota for sheer reliability. Make sure you get one that hasn't been used in heavy civil engineering - tunnelling contractors buy them new and use them until they break, after which they end up on the used market. The mini-excavator can only do two things, one of them badly. It will dig well, with the obvious limitations of shallower maximum digging depth, lower power and smaller bucket size when compared to a JCB. If is fitted with a dozer blade, it will doze extremely badly. Those blades are tiny, and there is very little control - you cannot see what you are doing. But they do add a lot of stability when digging. The tracks are not made for travelling long distances, more for moving around in a small, confined area. Tracking long distances will wear out the tracks very quickly. The tracks are tiny and the bearings are just too small for arduous travel. Track repairs are expensive - it is usually cheaper to fit a service exchange pair of tracks than repair your own but you will get whacked for any damage to the pair you exchange. Wear and tear is accepted but not damage. So a trailer is indicated in order to reduce the distance travelled. That is one of the points that was bothering me and in the end may well make me switch back to a big machine. Mini digger plus trailer is likely to push the budget up to £4000. As I said before, without any idea of what you want the machine for, it is impossible to recommend one type over the other. But in general, farm/smallholding use would suggest a tractor-based JCB, and work on confined urban sites (or shaft and tunnel digging) would suggest a mini-excavator. I live on a steep hillside and the track down the hill on my neighbours farm was originally made for horse and cart (as are some of the original gateways). The track has already been widened but it may need further work to get a JCB down it and at one point it might need re-routing as I am not convinced the shelf cut into the hillside would stand 7 tons and have no wish to go tumbling down a 1 in 1 slope. In another post you asked what was the difference between a JCB 3C and a 3D. Here's a page that tells you: http://www.classic-combines.com/jcb.html I don't recommend you buy from this company as, while the machines may be within your budget, they sill probably be slightly too small for your needs. ;-) Perhaps not. :-) -- Roger Chapman Roger, for ditch work I hate to say it but you probably need a "360" tracked machine - a conventional 3CX type not only is too long (as it needs to be at 90 degrees to the ditch to be effective) so will give you access problems, it also needs constant moving to do the next section. My 3CX is very versatile - today I've been backfilling trenches but it was also used for moving jumbo bags of ballast, and shifting a concrete mixer and a JCB Beaver hydralic breaker over a pile of hardcore - but I will probably get a contractor in to clear my about 1/2 mile of ditches !!!! AWEM |
#24
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The message
from "Andrew Mawson" contains these words: Roger, for ditch work I hate to say it but you probably need a "360" tracked machine - a conventional 3CX type not only is too long (as it needs to be at 90 degrees to the ditch to be effective) so will give you access problems, it also needs constant moving to do the next section. My 3CX is very versatile - today I've been backfilling trenches but it was also used for moving jumbo bags of ballast, and shifting a concrete mixer and a JCB Beaver hydralic breaker over a pile of hardcore - but I will probably get a contractor in to clear my about 1/2 mile of ditches !!!! Just as I was swinging back in favour of a JCB you put the dampers on. Is it just not possible to clear ditches with the machine parallel to the ditch? And what about straddling ditches? My garden is long and thin. Unless I can straddle the excavation I can't excavate for the heat pump. -- Roger Chapman |
#25
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![]() "Roger" wrote in message k... The message from "Andrew Mawson" contains these words: Roger, for ditch work I hate to say it but you probably need a "360" tracked machine - a conventional 3CX type not only is too long (as it needs to be at 90 degrees to the ditch to be effective) so will give you access problems, it also needs constant moving to do the next section. My 3CX is very versatile - today I've been backfilling trenches but it was also used for moving jumbo bags of ballast, and shifting a concrete mixer and a JCB Beaver hydralic breaker over a pile of hardcore - but I will probably get a contractor in to clear my about 1/2 mile of ditches !!!! Just as I was swinging back in favour of a JCB you put the dampers on. Is it just not possible to clear ditches with the machine parallel to the ditch? And what about straddling ditches? My garden is long and thin. Unless I can straddle the excavation I can't excavate for the heat pump. -- Roger Chapman If you place the 3CX parrallel to the ditch, then the back acter is at 90 degrees, which is the least stable position. Bear in mind that one wheel and foot are on the edge of the bank. If the bank is firm it can be done, but my banks aren't firm ! It would be a very narrow ditch if you can straddle it - but straddling is the usual way of trenching. My ditches are perhaps four foot of water, but sixteen foot from bank lip to bank lip - that would take a BIG machine to straddle it G AWEM |
#26
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Roger" wrote in message k... The message from "Andrew Mawson" contains these words: Roger, for ditch work I hate to say it but you probably need a "360" tracked machine - a conventional 3CX type not only is too long (as it needs to be at 90 degrees to the ditch to be effective) so will give you access problems, it also needs constant moving to do the next section. My 3CX is very versatile - today I've been backfilling trenches but it was also used for moving jumbo bags of ballast, and shifting a concrete mixer and a JCB Beaver hydralic breaker over a pile of hardcore - but I will probably get a contractor in to clear my about 1/2 mile of ditches !!!! Just as I was swinging back in favour of a JCB you put the dampers on. Is it just not possible to clear ditches with the machine parallel to the ditch? And what about straddling ditches? My garden is long and thin. Unless I can straddle the excavation I can't excavate for the heat pump. These are a few photos of a recovery of a burntout car that some little scrotes had driven over a waterlogged football pitch and down a track by a river, Due to trees and the state the pitch would have been in the only way to recover it was to cut right across very boggy marshland, How they got it there in the first place...... We used a four wheel drive tractor (probably weighing as much as a JCB!) and as the photos show a tracked digger to get the car out and onto the trailer. The tractor made heavy weather as the tracks show , the wee digger just floated over the surface, 4 months later tractor tracks still show but nothing at all from the wee digger (infact we got the digger to clear up some the tractors wheelmarks!! Des |
#27
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Roger wrote:
The message from Bruce contains these words: You have not said what you want it for. Surely the type of work to which you will put the machine will define which machine you need? And if you don't even say what it is, how can anyone advise you? My original draft included details of what I wanted to do but on reading it through I came to the conclusion that I had made the case for a mini digger rather than a full size JCB so I deleted the detail. For some of the work a JCB would be a better bet or just as good but with 2 of the jobs lined up - excavations for a ground based heat pump in the narrow confines of my garden and rescuing a trampled flat drainage ditch among mature trees a full size JCB would make the job much more difficult. First job to be done is to reroute a troublesome land drain. This really needs to be done this year. I need to dig a trench about 80 yards long and I am now too old to do that by hand. The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is a JCB for easy availability of spares. Obviously get the newest and best condition that you can afford. The earlier ones were not especially reliable even when new. Anything less than 15 years old is a better bet if you can find one within your price range. Try to get one with a 4-in-1 front bucket as it will doze, load, pick up (clamshell) and act as a forklift, hence 4-in-1. Incredibly versatile. If I do revert to searching for a JCB I think I would need to up my budget a bit more to get one less than 15 years old. The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is (probably) a Kubota for sheer reliability. Make sure you get one that hasn't been used in heavy civil engineering - tunnelling contractors buy them new and use them until they break, after which they end up on the used market. The mini-excavator can only do two things, one of them badly. It will dig well, with the obvious limitations of shallower maximum digging depth, lower power and smaller bucket size when compared to a JCB. If is fitted with a dozer blade, it will doze extremely badly. Those blades are tiny, and there is very little control - you cannot see what you are doing. But they do add a lot of stability when digging. The tracks are not made for travelling long distances, more for moving around in a small, confined area. Tracking long distances will wear out the tracks very quickly. The tracks are tiny and the bearings are just too small for arduous travel. Track repairs are expensive - it is usually cheaper to fit a service exchange pair of tracks than repair your own but you will get whacked for any damage to the pair you exchange. Wear and tear is accepted but not damage. So a trailer is indicated in order to reduce the distance travelled. That is one of the points that was bothering me and in the end may well make me switch back to a big machine. Mini digger plus trailer is likely to push the budget up to £4000. As I said before, without any idea of what you want the machine for, it is impossible to recommend one type over the other. But in general, farm/smallholding use would suggest a tractor-based JCB, and work on confined urban sites (or shaft and tunnel digging) would suggest a mini-excavator. I live on a steep hillside and the track down the hill on my neighbours farm was originally made for horse and cart (as are some of the original gateways). The track has already been widened but it may need further work to get a JCB down it and at one point it might need re-routing as I am not convinced the shelf cut into the hillside would stand 7 tons and have no wish to go tumbling down a 1 in 1 slope. In another post you asked what was the difference between a JCB 3C and a 3D. Here's a page that tells you: http://www.classic-combines.com/jcb.html I don't recommend you buy from this company as, while the machines may be within your budget, they sill probably be slightly too small for your needs. ;-) Perhaps not. :-) For the size and number of jobs that you need doing, would it not be cheaper to hire a machine as and when you need it? Or even hire a machine and operator, because (with all due respect) a skilled operator will do the job in a quarter of the time that you and I could. Alternatively, perhaps it might be worth hiring a mini excavator just to see how well it works for the jobs that you intend to do? Here's a hire centre in Leeds, not too far away, but there are bound to be some closer: http://tinyurl.com/5o2frj There are also trackless machines that - apparently - are quite good once you get used to them. Some are towable and might suit your requirement for moving around: http://tinyurl.com/5zyn76 http://tinyurl.com/6kopgy And finally. here is something of a "wild card" entry: http://tinyurl.com/62ajf8 I quite like that one! |
#28
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The message
from Bruce contains these words: snip Thanks for all the advice so far. For the size and number of jobs that you need doing, would it not be cheaper to hire a machine as and when you need it? Or even hire a machine and operator, because (with all due respect) a skilled operator will do the job in a quarter of the time that you and I could. Being retired time is something I should have in abundance. The idea behind buying instead of hiring is that at the end of the day there will be some money back from the sale of the machine. When it comes to hiring getting a man in with the machine may well be the cheaper option but it isn't DIY and playing with a new toy is surely half the fun. :-) Alternatively, perhaps it might be worth hiring a mini excavator just to see how well it works for the jobs that you intend to do? Here's a hire centre in Leeds, not too far away, but there are bound to be some closer: http://tinyurl.com/5o2frj But probably not cheaper and at £60 a day the fees will soon add up. I can't find a price for a driverless JCB but I assume it will be more than for a mini digger. There are also trackless machines that - apparently - are quite good once you get used to them. Some are towable and might suit your requirement for moving around: http://tinyurl.com/5zyn76 http://tinyurl.com/6kopgy I missed those as I am restricting my searches to a fairly small radius but my preference remains for a self propelled one even if I need a trailer to get it around. Is it time to extend the budget again? There is a 1986 3CX at Sheffield with a buy it now price of £5000. Too expensive for what it is? And finally. here is something of a "wild card" entry: http://tinyurl.com/62ajf8 I quite like that one! Needs a long extension lead though. :-) -- Roger Chapman |
#29
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Roger wrote:
The message from Bruce contains these words: snip Thanks for all the advice so far. You're very welcome. This thread is a lot of fun, so thank you for starting it. ;-) Is it time to extend the budget again? There is a 1986 3CX at Sheffield with a buy it now price of £5000. Too expensive for what it is? Was it on eBay? I couldn't find it. It doesn't sound bad for a 3CX of that age, but it depends on condition, condition, condition. |
#30
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The message
from Bruce contains these words: The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is a JCB What is a 2 wheel drive JCB like for traction on steep ground? My neighbours 4 wd tractor is next to useless in 2 wheel drive. -- Roger Chapman |
#31
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Roger wrote:
The message from Bruce contains these words: The most sensible choice in backhoe loaders is a JCB What is a 2 wheel drive JCB like for traction on steep ground? Not great. |
#32
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Roger wrote:
And finally any particular recommendations. You need to budget for a trailer. You need to be aware of towing limits, which will affect your choice of size of digger. A trailer for a mini-digger could cost you more than your budget. FWIW, I'm looking for the same thing, but I will need a trailer to haul the digger across Europe. I have concluded that there are many "cheap" mini diggers on the market but I suspect that the cheap ones are coupled to some sort of scam, because the prices are far too low for the condition of the machine. As to which one, I've been looking at Kubota and Yanmar, simply because I've used devices with engines from those makers and the engines are robust and reliable. Another alternative is a PTO powered back hoe, if you already have a tractor. Howevr most of the ones I see for sale are rubbish and generally don't have a slew ram or even decent levelling rams. You miight consider micro diggers of 3/4tonne ish. But they are limited in depth and capacity. |
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