I guess the auto bucket leveler must not work on that model, if you have to do it manually. I ran a 988 and a 992 and both had auto bucket leveler on them. The only time they didn't work was when it was broken.
I lived and worked in Watson Lake, in '82, when I was 17/18. I couldn't believe the prices then. What does a pack of smokes and a dozen beer go for, up there, now?
the loader is so big feedback would be a bad thing. its easy to feel the steering through the machine and it goes where the bucket is pointing. pretty easy even though it feels weird to start
@@agustorbjorns7371 takes a short time if you have clean water and some cleaning supplies, when its 4-6 hours to groceries or supplies, and no easy 120v power around, cleaning a loader used in mud isn't easy or quick we are lucky to have a clean window to see out. best i can do is scrape the floor daily with a little dustpan.
Actually depending on how you are working and if your an employee or a shareholder, you might get paid anyway or lose your shirt. Working as employees for existing company you get your pay probably biweekly so worst you might lose last few weeks of work if they go broke. But if your owner or shareholder, no gold=no r.o.i.
Obviously you don't believe in road maintenance!!!looks rough as hell. Get return to dig fixed and it's a lot easier for everything. Especially road maintenance
Not to much you can do with a pile of round river rocks when it comes to smooth roads. It is rough as hell. I generally backblade with fine talings. And try to push the bolders off the road. But some days its pretty bad. Just depends on the material.
Road maintenance in a mine is a pain in the a**. I would know as I work as a heavy equipment operator, operating Cat 793 haul trucks and other equipment. When the haul roads get dumped on with heavy rain or snow and then it turns to sticky deep a** mud, they turn to rough shit quick.