Backhoe
Encyclopedia : B : BA : BAC : Backhoe
A backhoe, also called a rear actor or back actor, is a piece of excavating equipment consisting of a digging bucket on the end of an articulated arm (also called a stick or dipper). Modern backhoes are powered by hydraulics. They are typically mounted on the back of a tractor or front loader. (Similar attachments for skid loaders are still called backhoes even though they are mounted on the front of the vehicle.)
A backhoe attached to a swiveling cab on top of tracks is called an excavator.
The British company JCB developed the early backhoes. Their first tractor equipped with both a backhoe and a front mounted loading bucket was completed in 1953 and set the standard pattern for future designs. Because of this backhoe-equipped diggers are commonly called 'JCBs' in the UK. The founder of the JCB company holds the honour of being the only non-American in the US construction industry's Hall of Fame.
Backhoe Manufacturers
- [Case]
- [New Holland]
- [Caterpillar]
- [Ford]
- [JCB]
- [John Deere]
- [KPX]
- [Massey Ferguson]
- [Terex]
- [Terramite]
External links
- [HowStuffWorks page on backhoe loaders], including animations and a simulator
- [Configure a Backhoe Loader] - from the official Caterpillar website
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