May 2009

Pulling More Than Their Weight

Pull scrapers may not challenge the big guys for brute force, but theyre the right size for an increasing number of jobs.

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Photo: Caterpillar

By Peter Hildebrandt

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If you have a job site full of boulders and tough gravel deposits, chances are you’ll stick with push scrapers to do the job. But this equipment has lots of up-and-coming little brothers. Though these may not be able to perform everywhere—especially at sites with heavy lifting—the big brothers of the scraper world are lately getting a run for their money from pull scrapers. The pullers of the scraper world now operate more economically, in a wider variety of sites, and in tight spots the big guys wouldn’t dream of touching.

From Horse-Drawn to GPS and Lasers
Founded in 1917, the Ucon, IN–based Miskin Scraper Works Inc. is the oldest pull-scraper manufacturer in the world, according to Mike McCrory, Miskin Eastern sales manager. The original product was manufactured to move soil for Idaho farmers in the Snake River Basin. Back then the scrapers were only a half-yard in size and pulled by horses. They grew in size and have been growing ever since. Now they range in size from 8 to 26 yards.

“If you’re going to use a scraper to move earth, the only time you should use a big, heavy-duty, self-propelled, motorized scraper is in heavy rock material,” says McCrory. “In those conditions where you have to do some push loading and have to pull some boulders out of the ground, the other scrapers can do that. Pull-type scrapers can do everything else. The market is probably 98% pull-type scrapers as opposed to the 2% to 5% that are motorized scrapers.”

Photo: Miskin
Founded in 1917, Miskin Scraper Works Inc. has seen three generations of family management and innovations in pull-scraper technology.
McCrory contends there aren’t as many motorized scrapers in the eastern US as there once were. “Back in 1995 it was nothing but motorized scrapers throughout the country; but, slowly, pull-type scrapers use moved west. California and the Rocky Mountain states still have perhaps the most motorized scrapers, simply due to the terrain. In the east, mountainous states such as West Virginia still have some motorized scrapers. I don’t think you’ll find any in Florida.”

Miskin’s come up with a few different variations on design. There are rollout dumps—the largest of which is the D-26—and push-out ejectors, the E-20s. Their scrapers all dump on-grade, a critical feature, according to McCrory. This means the cutting edge does not pivot toward the ground when unloading. All GPS and laser systems work perfectly as electric-over-hydraulic controlling the height of the blade when cutting or unloading. The laser catches low spots, and the blade will move 6 inches, for example, to compensate, still creating a smooth horizontal surface.

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“With our scrapers, operators can unload and the cutting edge would still be 1 inch off the ground,” adds McCrory. “The scrapers use a big piano hinge positioned behind the cutting edge; instead of having the cutting edge as part of the bucket, it’s a separate piece enabling our scrapers to work well.”

After 92 years, the company is in its third generation of the Miskin family management. Various manufacturers went from making simple farm-tractor scrapers to constructing scraper-hauler tractors, according to McCrory. “All we do is take the agricultural drawbar out and replace it with a scraper drawbar, install the scraper, and go to work. We also produce an extremely wide agricultural scraper, 18 feet wide, to cover more ground.” Next Page >

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