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On 11/20/2017 1:26 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 11/20/17 12:49 PM, Bill wrote: wrote: On Mon, 20 Nov 2017 17:28:12 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: Met older daughter and family for a weekend in Vegas.Â*Â* Wife gave son in law and me an Excavator experience at digthisvegas.com. Fun weekend. Expensive stay though.Â*Â* Even excluding any gambling.Â*Â* Stayed at Mandalay Bay.Â*Â* Specials on room, but no reasonable dining.Â*Â* Even in room coffee was $5 a cup.Â* Got a lesson in a Cat 315C excavator.Â*Â* Dug a big hole, moved 2500# tires and picked up a basketball and dropped in a tire. Fun trip.Â*Â* I have a great wife.Â*Â* Great gifts.Â* No boating. === Cool.Â* I'd like to try that sometime. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com He has a couple franchises elsewhere I think. Yeah. I've driven one of those relatively tiny backhoes you see being towed behind a pickup truck, and I managed not to kill anyone or destroy the equipment. Love to try a full-sized ecavator. I had the backhoe attachment for the John Deere tractor I had. Not big (12 inch wide bucket) and not super powerful but it did a lot of work over the years. I dug all the electrical and plumbing trenches for the pool when we had it installed. The contractor had some kind of machine but had a hard time because of all the rocks and boulders. The JD handled them well, although I overloaded the hydraulics many times. Trenches all had to be four feet deep and collectively there were about 150 -200 feet of them. |
#2
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On 11/20/17 2:18 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/20/2017 1:26 PM, Keyser Soze wrote: On 11/20/17 12:49 PM, Bill wrote: wrote: On Mon, 20 Nov 2017 17:28:12 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: Met older daughter and family for a weekend in Vegas.Â*Â* Wife gave son in law and me an Excavator experience at digthisvegas.com. Fun weekend. Expensive stay though.Â*Â* Even excluding any gambling.Â*Â* Stayed at Mandalay Bay.Â*Â* Specials on room, but no reasonable dining.Â*Â* Even in room coffee was $5 a cup.Â* Got a lesson in a Cat 315C excavator.Â*Â* Dug a big hole, moved 2500# tires and picked up a basketball and dropped in a tire. Fun trip.Â*Â* I have a great wife.Â*Â* Great gifts.Â* No boating. === Cool.Â* I'd like to try that sometime. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com He has a couple franchises elsewhere I think. Yeah. I've driven one of those relatively tiny backhoes you see being towed behind a pickup truck, and I managed not to kill anyone or destroy the equipment. Love to try a full-sized ecavator. I had the backhoe attachment for the John Deere tractor I had.Â* Not big (12 inch wide bucket) and not super powerful but it did a lot of work over the years.Â* I dug all the electrical and plumbing trenches for the pool when we had it installed.Â* The contractor had some kind of machine but had a hard time because of all the rocks and boulders.Â* The JD handled them well, although I overloaded the hydraulics many times. Trenches all had to be four feet deep and collectively there were about 150 -200 feet of them. Luddite the Trencherman...sounds like a really really bad action hero movie. ![]() |
#3
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On Mon, 20 Nov 2017 14:18:00 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: I had the backhoe attachment for the John Deere tractor I had. Not big (12 inch wide bucket) and not super powerful but it did a lot of work over the years. I dug all the electrical and plumbing trenches for the pool when we had it installed. The contractor had some kind of machine but had a hard time because of all the rocks and boulders. The JD handled them well, although I overloaded the hydraulics many times. Trenches all had to be four feet deep and collectively there were about 150 -200 feet of them. Cool. I always wished I had a decent reason to buy a backhoe. I played with the one my nieces hubby borrowed to dig out my sister's abandoned septic tank when they built their pool. If you only had one machine that is probably the one to have but they are really not that popular here. One of the guys I talked to said the arrangement of the hoses to the backhoe arm on the traditional one is susceptible to too much wear from the sand. In Maryland they were everywhere. In the 1&2 family biz here an tracked Bobcat is king. We are not digging deep foundations and you can do more with the Bobcat. When my wife was building, there was always a Bobcat in the neighborhood and MartÃ*n the operator was her buddy. |
#4
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