Harvesters are employed effectively in level to moderately steep terrain for
clearcutting areas of forest. For very steep hills or for removing individual trees, ground crews working with
chain saws are still preferred in some countries. In northern Europe small and manoeuvrable harvesters are used for
thinning operations, manual felling is typically only used in extreme conditions, where tree size exceeds the capacity of the harvester head or by small woodlot owners. The principle aimed for in mechanised logging is "no feet on the
forest floor", and the harvester and forwarder allow this to be achieved. Keeping workers inside the driving cab of the machine provides a safer and more comfortable working environment for industrial scale logging. Harvesters are built on a robust all-terrain vehicle, either
wheeled,
tracked, or on a
walking excavator. The vehicle may be articulated to provide tight turning capability around obstacles. A
diesel engine provides power for both the vehicle and the harvesting mechanism through
hydraulic drive. An extensible, articulated boom, similar to that on an
excavator, reaches out from the vehicle to carry the harvester head. Some harvesters are adaptations of excavators with a new harvester head, while others are purpose-built vehicles. "Combi" machines are available which combine the felling capability of a harvester with the load-carrying capability of a forwarder, allowing a single operator and machine to fell, process and transport trees. These novel type of vehicles are only competitive in operations with short distances to the landing. == Felling head ==