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<blockquote data-quote="864wood" data-source="post: 162" data-attributes="member: 38"><p>Well just to rub it in; it was @ 70deg, light north wind of 2-3 knts and 55% humidity. Done crying?? Dont worry this is MD and when summer comes it sucks. As I have posted in the track loader forum I never take my machine to a job without it. As far as the clamshell action is concerned, it is a cooordinated excercise of bucket elevation, bucket attitude, forward moition on machine and finally finesse on togle to operate hydrylics to combo. A picture is worth a thousand words but I use this technique to great effect every day I operate the machine and to the dimay of my competion. The hydrylics are very powerful but not sufficent to just honk down on a bite of material; ie dirt. That is where the coordinated excersize comes into play. It definately saves on material cost to clamshell those last two buckets of material</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="864wood, post: 162, member: 38"] Well just to rub it in; it was @ 70deg, light north wind of 2-3 knts and 55% humidity. Done crying?? Dont worry this is MD and when summer comes it sucks. As I have posted in the track loader forum I never take my machine to a job without it. As far as the clamshell action is concerned, it is a cooordinated excercise of bucket elevation, bucket attitude, forward moition on machine and finally finesse on togle to operate hydrylics to combo. A picture is worth a thousand words but I use this technique to great effect every day I operate the machine and to the dimay of my competion. The hydrylics are very powerful but not sufficent to just honk down on a bite of material; ie dirt. That is where the coordinated excersize comes into play. It definately saves on material cost to clamshell those last two buckets of material [/QUOTE]
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