September-October 2006

Gnarly Solutions for Gnarly Materials

“We should close the US Patent Office, because everything that can be invented has been invented.” —Remark erroneously attributed to Charles H. Duell, commissioner of the US Patent Office in 1899

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By George Leposky

Comments


Brush-cutter technology has changed over the past 20 years, Brown says. “We used to have flail-type, free-swinging hammer mowers with a lot of wear-and-tear parts that were hard to maintain. Today all those parts are gone. You can run the machine and not have to work on it. There are only two grease fittings on the entire attachment, one for each main-shaft bearing that the drum spins on. We have maintenance down to making sure your knives are sharp and putting in four pumps of grease in the morning.”

Downsizing the Product
Today, brush cutters require an excavator the size of a Caterpillar Model 315, which weighs about 35,000 lbs. What the world needs—and eventually will get, Brown says—is a smaller excavator, weighing less than 20,000 lbs, with high-flow hydraulics to run the machine and auxiliary hydraulics of at least 30 gallons a minute to run the brush-cutter attachment. “The first company to do that is going to have a huge market for it,” he says. “You could tow such an excavator on a tag trailer behind a large truck. You wouldn’t need a low-bed to move it around.”
Brown also expects brush-cutter manufacturers to design even smaller attachments to mount on a skid-steer. Weighing 10,000–12,000 lbs, skid-steers already meet a brush cutter’s hydraulic requirements, and they can be towed behind a large pickup truck.

“You could spend $25,000 for the mower head and $40,000–$60,000 for a skid steer,” Brown says. “For under $100,000 you could be in the mowing business. Such a small one-person contracting business could get a lot of work done. The equipment would be small enough to get in and out of job sites in small areas, and it would have the appropriate hydraulics to run our attachment and many others.”

Advertisement

Still another refinement Brown foresees is application of variable hydraulic motors to brush cutting. “They’re out there,” he says. “It’s something we’re working toward.”  



Author's Bio: George Leposky is a science and technology writer based in Miami, FL.

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get MSW Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our MSW email newsletter!