That 7 sounds good! We mixed excavators and dozers with root rakes when we did raw clearing. The trac-hoes could knock down trees and with the thumb, it could make clean piles of materials which the dozers could assemble by pushing. Being able to burn debris instead of burying it or transporting it is more profitable in my experience. We had a 6E (flat trac) a 325 excavator, a 12 G motor grader, a 4 X 4 416 backhoe, a John Deere 4 X 4 60 HP tractor loader, A Mack and a Ford dump trucks and we had a tractor trailer style 32 foot dump trailer. We had a 1992 extended hood Peterbilt (3406) and a 2006 Peterbilt day cab with 600 hp. Now, it's all rusting somewhere in the Southeast of America and I'm retired in Thailand. Finally, a story with a happy ending!
My first bulldozer was a 1963 D 4. Operating it was similar to break-dancing. The newer machines, especially the hydro-static machines, are like driving a sports car compared to the older ones. The good news was the guy who sold me the D4 decided he wanted it back so I moved up to a D-5, later to a D-8. It was weird, we got the D8 because we were doing a lot of state and DOT roadbuilding but when we got trucks (and 4 axle trailers) that could carry our stuff, we started moving other people's equipment more than our own.
n importe quoi !!! auqu un respect du sol ,a la place du jardin il a qu a constuire un immeuble en pleine jungle il aurai du prendre un tracteur fend 900 mt ou autre maeque a chenille equiper d un gros broyeur Kirpy mixe pierre et forestier( profondeur de travaille 20 a 40 cm )ou chenillard Golotrax de 300 ch , la ton sol serais enrichie et nivelé