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If you've ever operated a large hydraulic excavator, you know the feeling of "pump lag." You snap the joystick to swing the house, and for a fraction of a second, the engine lugs, the pump tries to ca
For decades, the most stressful job on an earthmoving site was the grade checker-the person walking the dirt with a rover rod, calculating cut and fill, and yelling hand signals to the dozer operator
Why Standard Electronic Ear Muffs Are Being Replaced by Aviation Tech
How Embedded NFC Chips Are Finally Killing Compliance Theater
The shift from lead-acid to lithium-ion forklift batteries is usually framed as a story about efficiency and labor savings-no more swapping batteries at the end of a shift. But the real driving force
Working near waterways-dredging, bridge repair, dam maintenance-has always carried the risk of a catastrophic hydraulic line blowout. A single ruptured hose can dump dozens of gallons of petroleum oil
For years, if a massive pivot bore on an excavator boom wore out into an oval shape, the only fix was to drag the entire boom off the machine, put it on a lowboy, and send it to a heavy machine shop.
How Boot Manufacturers Finally Solved the Clunky Metatarsal Problem
Why the Classic Hard Hat Is Being Banned From Major Job Sites
For the last few years, the big news in warehousing was the development of Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMRs). But a massive shift is happening in how these robots are actually being deployed. Large logi
We've spent years talking about fully electric excavators, but a much more practical, immediate shift is happening in the attachment world. Manufacturers of heavy demolition and processing attachments
Every new piece of heavy equipment rolling off the assembly line today comes with a factory-installed cellular modem. It constantly pings the OEM's servers with GPS location, engine idle times, fault