Information about Bulldozer

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A Liebherr bulldozer with ripper at the back


A bulldozer is a crawler (caterpillar tracked tractor), equipped with a substantial metal plate (known as a blade), used to push large quantities of soil, sand, rubble, etc, during construction work. The term "bulldozer" is often used to mean any heavy engineering vehicle, but precisely, the term refers only to a tractor (usually tracked) fitted with a dozer blade. That is the meaning used herein.

History

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Caterpillar D9 Bulldozer older version in the museum Sinsheim, Germany
The first bulldozers were adapted from farm Holt tractors that were used to plough fields. Their versatility in soft ground for logging and road building, lead directly to them becoming the armoured tank in the first war.

In 1923, a young farmer named James Cummings and a draftsman named J. Earl McLeod made the first designs for a bulldozer. A replica is on display at the city park in Morrowville, Kansas where the two built the first bulldozer.[1]

By the 1920s, tracked vehicles became common, particularly the Caterpillar 60. To dig canals, raise earth dams, and do other earthmoving jobs, these tractors were equipped with a large thick metal plate in front. This thick metal plate (it got its curved shape later) is called a "blade". The blade peels layers of soil and pushes it forward as the tractor advances. Several specialized blades have been developed: for high volume loads such as coal, rakes to remove only larger boulders, or blades with razor sharp edges to cut tree stumps. In some early models the driver sat on top in the open without a cabin. These attachments, home built or by small equipment manufacturers of attachments for wheeled and crawler tractors and trucks, appeared by 1929, widespread acceptance of the bull-grader does not seem to appear before the mid-1930s, and the addition of powered down force made them the preferred excavation machine for large and small contractors alike by the 1940s, by which time the term "bulldozer" referred to the entire machine and not just the attachment.

Over the years, when engineers needed equipment to complete large scale earthworks, firms like CAT, Komatsu, Fiat-Allis, John Deere, International Harvester, Case, Liebherr, Terex and JCB started to manufacture large tracked-type earthmoving machines. They were large, noisy, and powerful, and therefore nicknamed "bulldozer".

Through the years, bulldozers got bigger, more powerful, and more sophisticated. Important improvements include more powerful engines, more reliable drive trains, better tracks, raised cabins, and hydraulic (instead of early models' cable operated) arms that enable more precise manipulation of the blade and automated controls. As an option, bulldozers can be equipped with a rear ripper claw to loosen rocky soils or to break up pavement (roads).

The best known maker of bulldozers is probably the Caterpillar Tractor Company, which earned its reputation for making tough durable reliable machines. Although these machines began as modified farm tractors, they became the mainstay for big civil construction projects, and found their way into use by military construction units throughout the world. Their best known model, the Caterpillar D9, was also used to clear mines and demolish enemy structures.

History of the word

  • Around 1880: In the USA, a "bull-dose" was a large and efficient dose of any sort of medicine or punishment. 'Bull-dosing' meant a severe whipping or coercion, or other intimidation such as at gunpoint.
  • 1800s: term used in engineering for a horizontal forging press[1].
  • 1886: "bulldozer" meant a large-caliber pistol and the person who wielded it.
  • Late 1800s: "bulldozing" meant using big force to push over or through any obstacle.
  • Later: applied to the vehicle.
These appeared as early as 1929, but were known as "bull grader" blades, the term "bulldozer blade" does not appear to come into widespread use until the mid 1930s and now refers to the whole machine not just the attachment.

Description

Most often, bulldozers are large and powerful tracked engineering vehicles. The tracks give them excellent ground hold and mobility through very rough terrain. Wide tracks help distribute the bulldozer's weight over large area (decreasing pressure), thus preventing it from sinking in sandy or muddy ground. Extra wide tracks are known as 'swamp tracks'. Bulldozers have excellent ground hold and a torque divider designed to convert the engine's power into dragging ability , letting the bulldozer use its own weight to push very heavy things and remove obstacles that are stuck in the ground. The Caterpillar D9, for example, can easily tow tanks that weigh more than 70 tons. Because of these attributes, bulldozers are used to clear areas of obstacles, shrubbery, burnt vehicles, and remains of structures.

Sometimes a bulldozer is used to push another piece of earthmoving equipment known as a "scraper". The towed Fresno Scraper, invented in 1883 by James Porteous, was the first design to enable this to be done economically, removing the soil from the cut and depositing it elsewhere on shallow ground (fill). Many dozer blades have a reinforced center section with this purpose in mind, and are called "bull blades."

The bulldozer's primary tools are the blade and the ripper.

Ripper

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Multi-shank ripper
The ripper is the long claw-like device on the back of the bulldozer. Rippers can come singly (single shank) or in groups or two or more (multi shank rippers). Usually, a single shank is preferred for heavy ripping. The ripper shank is fitted with a replaceable tungsten steel alloy tip.

Ripping rock lets the ground surface rock be broken into small rubble easy to handle and transport, which can then be removed so grading can take place. Agricultural ripping lets rocky or very hard earth be broken up so otherwise unploughable land can be farmed. For example, much of the very best land in the California wine country consists of old lava flows: with heavy bulldozers such as the Caterpillar D9 and the Caterpillar D11 the lava is shattered allowing practical agriculture for the wine industry. Also, hard earth can be ripped and decompacted to allow planting of orchards where otherwise trees could not grow on the land.

Blade

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Degelman Blade Degelman Industries Ltd.
The bulldozer blade is a piece of heavy metal plate, installed on the front of the tractor, with the aim of pushing things, handling rough obstacles and shoving sand, soil and debris. The dozer blade on front of the tractor usually comes in 3 varieties:
  1. A Straight Blade ("S-Blade") which is short and has no lateral curve, no side wings, and can be used for fine grading.
  2. A Universal Blade ("U-Blade") which is tall and very curved, and has large side wings to carry more material.
  3. A "S-U" combination blade which is shorter, has less curvature, and smaller side wings.This blade is typically used for pushing piles of large rocks, such as at a quarry.


In military use, dozer blades are fixed on combat engineering vehicles and can optionally be fitted on other vehicles, such as artillery tractors like the Type 73 or M8 Tractor. Combat applications for dozer blades include clearing battlefield obstacles and preparing fire positions.[2]

Modifications

Bulldozers have been further modified over time to evolve into new machines which are capable of working in ways that the original bulldozer can not. One example is that loader tractors were created by removing the blade and substituting a large volume bucket and hydraulic arms which can raise and lower the bucket, thus making it useful for scooping up earth and loading it into trucks. Other modifications to the original bulldozer include making it smaller to let it operate in small work areas where movement is limited, such as in mining. A very small bulldozer is sometimes called a calfdozer: see the image at this link and this link.

Nevertheless, the original earthmoving bulldozers are still irreplaceable as their tasks are concentrated in deforestation, earthmoving, ground leveling, and road carving. The heavy bulldozers are mainly employed to level the terrain to make it fit to construct on. The construction, however, is mainly done by small bulldozers and loader tractors.

Education

The National Association of Heavy Equipment Training Schools (NAHETS), established 2002, uses bulldozer training schools and circuilum as a method to test and train users in the ability of bulldozer use.

Uses

Bulldozers can be found on large and small scale construction sites, mines, roadsides, military bases, heavy industry factories, and large governmental projects.

Armored bulldozers

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An armored Caterpillar D9 Bulldozer used by Israel's armed forces.
Some bulldozers, especially bulldozers in military usage, have been fitted with armor in order to protect the driver from enemy fire, thus enabling the bulldozer to operate in battle zones. The best-known armored bulldozer is probably the IDF Caterpillar D9, used by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) for detonating explosive charges and demolishing structures under fire. Caterpillar does not make nor install the armor—that is entirely the work of the IDF. However, various users, including the US military, buy armor kits from the IDF and fit them onto their own D9s. The design varies, but the armor kit on average adds 10 tonnes to the weight of the bulldozer, which weighs about 49 tonnes without the armor.

Some bulldozers have been fitted with armor by non-government civilian operators to prevent bystanders or police from interfering with the work performed by the bulldozer, as in the case of strikes or demolition of condemned buildings. See Marvin Heemeyer, 'Killdozer'.

See also

Derivative word uses

  • The "Bulldozer" is a popular mixed drink consisting of one shot of Jägermeister and a half can of Red Bull. The drink is also known as a "Jäger Bomb".
  • The bulldozer shrimp is a tropical sea shrimp so named because it spends much of its time pushing sand out of the hole in which it stays.
  • Tracked Loaders (also known as Crawler Loaders) are sometimes incorrectly referred to as bulldozers because of the similarity in design.



A Caterpillar D10N bulldozer at work


References

1. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, 1910, Vol. 27, p. 39.
2. ^ Trewhitt, Philip (1999). Armoured Fighting Vehicles. Dempsey-Parr. ISBN 1-84084-328-4. 

External links

Bulldozer may refer to:
  • Bulldozer, a caterpillar tracked tractor.
  • Bulldozer (band), an Italian music band.
  • Bulldozer (comics), a fictional character from Marvel Comics.
  • Bulldozer (EP), the second EP of the band Big Black.

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tractor crawler (also called: track-type tractor, tracked vehicle or track-laying vehicle) is a vehicle that runs on tracks instead of wheels. Sometimes equipment of this type is called , Caterpillars or "CATs" after the manufacturer of one make of bulldozer.
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Caterpillar tracks are large (modular) tracks used on tanks, construction equipment and certain other off-road vehicles. Unlike the Kégresse tracks which use a flexible belt, most caterpillar tracks are made of a number of rigid units that are joined to each other.
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tractor is a vehicle specifically designed to provide a high tractive effort at slow speeds, for the purposes of hauling a trailer or machinery used in agriculture or construction.
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Engineering vehicles, or construction equipment (sometimes referred to as earth movers), are heavy-duty vehicles, specially designed for executing civil engineering and construction tasks.
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Benjamin Holt (1849 – 1920) was an American inventor who developed David Roberts' design for one of the first practical caterpillar tracks for use in tractors.
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plough (American spelling: plow) is a tool used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or planting. It has been a basic instrument for most of recorded history, and represents one of the major advances in agriculture.
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tank is a tracked armoured combat vehicle designed to engage enemies head-on, using direct fire from a large-calibre gun and supporting fire from machine guns. Heavy armour as well as a high degree of mobility give it survivability, while the tracks allow it to cross even rough
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Morrowville, Kansas

Seal
Motto:
Location of Morrowville, Kansas
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Kansas
County Washington
Area
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Caterpillar Sixty Horsepower tractor crawler of 1919, was the world's first successful bulldozer. It helped launch the Caterpillar name and legend. Initially developed by the Holt Company of California, with a tricycle-type crawler in that it had rear drive tracks and a forward
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Canals are artificial channels for water.

There are two main types of canals: irrigation canals, which are used for the delivery of water, and waterways, which are navigable transportation canals used for passage of goods and people, often connected to (and sometimes
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Please help [ improve the article] or discuss these issues on the talk page.
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A blade is the flat part of a tool, weapon, or machine (such as a fan) that normally has a cutting edge and/or pointed end typically made of a metal, most recently, steel intentionally used to cut, stab, slice, throw, thrust, position and/or place (an example of this is
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SOiL is a five-piece Hard Rock band from Chicago, Illinois, United States. They formed in 1997 and are still active. They are signed to DRT Entertainment and have released four albums, their most recent being True Self which was released in March 27 2006.
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Coal (IPA: /ˈkəʊl/) is a fossil fuel formed in swamp ecosystems where plant remains were saved by water and mud from oxidization and biodegradation.
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Steamboat Rock" stands in Garden of the Gods park in Colorado Springs, CO]]

In geology, a boulder is a rock with grain size of usually no less than 256 mm (10 inches) diameter. While a boulder may be small enough to move or roll manually, others are extremely massive.
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tree is a perennial woody plant. It is sometimes defined as a woody plant that attains diameter of 10 cm (30 cm girth) or more at breast height (130 cm above ground).
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Earthworks are engineering works created through the moving of massive quantities of soil or unformed rock. Engineers need to concern themselves with issues of geotechnical engineering (such as soil fluidity and friction) and with quantity estimation to ensure that soil volumes in
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Caterpillar Inc.

Public (NYSE:  CAT )
Founded 1925
Headquarters Peoria, Illinois, USA

Key people James W. Owens, CEO & Chairman
Industry Heavy equipment
Products Construction & Agriculture Machinery
Revenue $41.
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For the city called Komatsu in Ishikawa prefecture, Japan, see Komatsu, Ishikawa.

Komatsu Limited
株式会社小松製作所


Public (TYO: 6301 )
Founded Jan, 1917 (Komatsu Iron Works)
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Deere & Company

Public (NYSE:  DE )
Founded 1868
Headquarters Moline, IL

Key people Robert W. Lane, Chairman & CEO Bharat Vedak, Senior Vice President, John Deere Intelligent Mobile Equipment Technologies
Industry Heavy equipment
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International Harvester Company

Founded Chicago, Illinois (1902)
Headquarters Chicago, Illinois

Industry Agricultural, Automotive
Products Farm Machinery

International Harvester Company (IHC or IH
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Case CE, also Case Construction Equipment or simply Case, is a brand of construction equipment from CNH Global. Under this brand name, CNH Global is the third biggest manufacturer of construction equipment behind CAT (#1) and Komatsu (#2).
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Liebherr Group is a German manufacturer established in 1949 by Hans Liebherr that is headquartered in Biberach an der Riss, Baden-Württemberg. The Liebherr Group’s holding company is Liebherr-International AG in Bulle, Switzerland, which is entirely owned by members of the
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Terex Corporation (NYSE:  TEX ) is a diversified global manufacturer of a broad range of heavy equipment for a variety of industries, including construction, infrastructure, quarrying, recycling, surface mining, shipping, transportation, refining, utility and maintenance.
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J. C. Bamford Ltd.

Private
Founded 1945
Headquarters Rocester, United Kingdom

Key people Sir Anthony Bamford, Chairman
Industry Heavy equipment
Products Construction, Demolition & Agriculture Machinery
Employees 8,000
Website www.jcb.
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Hydraulics is a topic of science and engineering dealing with the mechanical properties of liquids. Hydraulics is part of the more general discipline of fluid power. Fluid mechanics provides the theoretical foundation for hydraulics, which focuses on the engineering uses of fluid
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Ripper may refer to:
  • Jack the Ripper, a pseudonym given to an unidentified serial killer (or killers) active in the largely impoverished Whitechapel area and adjacent districts of London in the latter half of 1888.

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Pavement (American English) or road surface (British English) is the durable surface material laid down on an area intended to sustain traffic (vehicular or foot traffic). Such surfaces are frequently marked to guide traffic.
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Caterpillar Inc.

Public (NYSE:  CAT )
Founded 1925
Headquarters Peoria, Illinois, USA

Key people James W. Owens, CEO & Chairman
Industry Heavy equipment
Products Construction & Agriculture Machinery
Revenue $41.
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