Log Loaders Logging Equipment Dismantled Machines

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    About Log Loaders

    A log loader is often the last machine at a logging site to handle timber before it heads off to the mill; as the name implies, these machines pick up logs from a staging site and load them for transport.

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    Serial Number0
    Location: Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
    Serial Number5A7384067
    Location: St-Prime, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Garage Alain St-Pierre
    Serial Number1CA082E0018
    Location: St-Prime, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Garage Alain St-Pierre
    Serial NumberUNKNOWN
    Location: St-Prime, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Garage Alain St-Pierre
    Serial Number8800200
    Location: Vanderhoof, British Columbia, Canada
    Seller: Diamco Ent. Ltd
    Serial NumberEC240BLCV10551
    Location: Maple Ridge, British Columbia, Canada
    Seller: BRIKERS
    Serial NumberVCEC300EV00311143
    Location: Vanderhoof, British Columbia, Canada
    Seller: Diamco Ent. Ltd
    Serial Number145-35466
    Location: Cheshire, ., United Kingdom
    Seller: Eric Warburton Plant & Machinery Ltd
    Serial Number14C79410
    Location: Cheshire, ., United Kingdom
    Seller: Eric Warburton Plant & Machinery Ltd
    Location: Woringen, Bavaria, Germany
    Seller: Albrecht & Gerber Baumaschinen GmbH


    About Log Loaders

    After logs have been felled, delimbed, and cut down to the desired length, log loaders come in to move them onto a truck for transport. These forestry machines have a boom and a hydraulic grapple to grab onto large logs and either swing them into place or actually carry them to the desired location, depending on the configuration. There are various types of log loaders, including knuckle-boom, crane, forklift, mobile heel boom loaders, and butt-n-top loaders, just to name a few examples. Some loaders are designed to handle one log at a time, while others are capable of carrying multiple logs.

    Covering The Bases

    In addition to varying boom and grapple styles, you’ll also find log loaders with different bases from which to choose. The most common examples include stationary, trailer, track, wheel, and truck loaders. Whereas stationary and trailer log loaders have to be moved into place and properly positioned before they can be used, track, wheel, and truck-mounted log loaders are drivable, so you can take them to harder-to-reach places and transport logs wherever they need to go. Stationary loaders work well in cable logging operations when used in conjunction with yarders, but drivable alternatives offer mobility for getting into tighter spaces or traveling over long distances. Truck-mounted log loaders are unique because in some cases, the truck includes a flatbed and can load itself, providing an all-in-one transport solution.

    Many Options To Choose From

    You’ll find hundreds of new and used log loaders for sale at ForestryTrader.com from manufacturers including Barko, Caterpillar, Deere, Link-Belt, Prentice, Tigercat, and others. They range in price from around $5,000 up to $300,000 or more with models years from 1961 up to 2019, so operations of all sizes can find a log loader to meet their needs.