, Finland A loader is a type of
tractor, usually wheeled,
sometimes on tracks, that has a front-mounted wide
bucket connected to the end of two booms (arms) to scoop up loose material from the ground, such as dirt, sand or gravel, and move it from one place to another without pushing the material across the ground. A loader is commonly used to move a stockpiled material from ground level and deposit it into an awaiting dump truck or into an open trench excavation. The loader assembly may be a removable attachment or permanently mounted. Often the bucket can be replaced with other devices or tools—for example, many can mount forks to lift heavy pallets or
shipping containers, and a hydraulically opening "clamshell" bucket allows a loader to act as a light dozer or scraper. The bucket can also be augmented with devices like a bale grappler for handling large bales of
hay or
straw. Large loaders, such as the Kawasaki 95ZV-2, John Deere 844K, ACR 700K Compact Wheel Loader, Caterpillar 950H, Volvo L120E, Case 921E, or Hitachi ZW310 usually have only a front bucket and are called front loaders, whereas small loader tractors are often also equipped with a small
backhoe and are called
backhoe loaders or loader backhoes or
JCBs, after the company that first claimed to have invented them. Small loaders, such as the GEHL or Manitou Skid Steer are suitable to work inside buildings and on high floors. Sometimes, construction happens inside a building or many floors above the ground. Because GEHL or Manitou skid steer loaders have a compact size and are not too heavy, a crane can lift them onto the top floor of a new building. Other companies like CASE in America and Whitlock in the UK had been manufacturing excavator loaders well before JCB. 908M at a landscape supply store in
San Marcos The largest loader in the world is
LeTourneau L-2350. Currently these large loaders are in production in the Longview, Texas facility. The L-2350 uses a diesel-electric propulsion system similar to that used in a locomotive. Each rubber tired wheel is driven by its own independent electric motor. into a
salt spreader Loaders are used mainly for loading materials into
trucks, laying pipe, clearing rubble, and digging. A loader is not the most efficient machine for digging as it cannot dig very deep below the level of its wheels, like a
backhoe or an
excavator can. The capacity of a loader
bucket can be anywhere from 0.5 to 36
m3 depending upon the size of the machine and its application. The front loader's bucket capacity is generally much bigger than a bucket capacity of a
backhoe loader. Unlike most
bulldozers, most loaders are
wheeled and not
tracked, although
track loaders are common. They are successful where sharp-edged materials in
construction debris would damage rubber wheels, or where the ground is soft and muddy. Wheels provide better mobility and speed and do not damage
paved roads as much as tracks, but provide less traction. In construction areas loaders are also used to transport
building materials such as bricks, pipe, metal bars, and digging tools over short distances. Front-loaders are commonly used to
remove snow especially from sidewalks, parking lots, and other areas too small for using snowplows and other heavy equipment. They are sometimes used as snowplows with a
snowplow attachment but commonly have a bucket or snow basket, which can also be used to load snow into the rear compartment of a snowplow or dump truck. High-tip buckets are suitable for light materials such as chip, peat and light gravel and when the bucket is emptied from a height. Unlike backhoes or standard tractors fitted with a front bucket, many large loaders do not use automotive steering mechanisms. Instead, they steer by a hydraulically actuated pivot point set exactly between the front and rear
axles. This is referred to as "articulated steering" and allows the front axle to be solid, allowing it to carry greater weight. Articulated steering provides better maneuverability for a given wheelbase. Since the front wheels and attachment rotate on the same axis, the operator is able to "steer" his load in an arc after positioning the machine, which can be useful. The tradeoff is that when the machine is "twisted" to one side and a heavy load is lifted high, it has a greater risk of turning over to the "wide" side. Front loaders gained popularity during the last two decades, especially in urban engineering projects and small earthmoving works.
Heavy equipment manufacturers offer a wide range of loader sizes and duties. The term "loader" is also used in the debris removal field to describe the boom on a
grapple truck. == Major components ==