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Oldish Hopto Excavator

Dickie

Active Member
Joined
May 8, 2006
Messages
38
Location
Surrey, BC
Found this 'little gem' for sale in a mining town. It's the only Hopto I have seen with my own eyes; I guess they are rare because of how short a time they were made before the Gradall absorption. Just thought I would share this one.
 

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dayexco

Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2005
Messages
1,224
Location
south dakota
actually, hopto is one of the oldest hydraulic backhoe/excavators out there. my dad bought his first 180 hopto in i think 52, after that, he had 3 or 4 200's.....and 1 - 300....

the model you have there, is one of the last models they produced.
 

biggixxerjim

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 6, 2007
Messages
446
Location
New Jerz
actually, hopto is one of the oldest hydraulic backhoe/excavators out there. my dad bought his first 180 hopto in i think 52, after that, he had 3 or 4 200's.....and 1 - 300....

the model you have there, is one of the last models they produced.

I thought Cat introduced the first hydraulic excavator, the 225, back in the mid 70's....????
 

dayexco

Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2005
Messages
1,224
Location
south dakota
cat from american manufacturer standpoint....was a latecomer in the game. the old american made hydraulic excavators....hopto, shield bantam, koerhing, hy-hoe, hein warner, american, hydra-unit, warner swasey, drott, bucyrus erie, northwest, all before cat entered the market...come on dudes, help me out, i know there are more than what i've got here.
 

CM1995

Administrator
Joined
Jan 21, 2007
Messages
13,350
Location
Alabama
Occupation
Running what I brung and taking what I win
P&H, O&K, Hydra-hoe?
 

nedly05

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2006
Messages
1,801
Location
Adk. Mtns, NY
The first hoes around here were hopto's, however they were a backhoe mounted on the back of a truck!
 

insleyboy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 24, 2008
Messages
191
Location
Monroe Michigan
Occupation
Operator 25 years, was laborer for 7 years
I worked on 560, 600 and 3500 Insleys for a pile driving co In Trenton Michigan. They were the cream of the crop they said back in the mid 70's. They're problem was Cat, Kobelco and the like were gaining popularity and redefining the operators comfort while Insley, Hydra-Unit...all kept the cheap to produce heel-to-toe type controls and were very quickly a thing of the past!
 

Deere9670

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 23, 2008
Messages
387
Location
Illinois
Occupation
Farm equipment operator
Were did Drott come into play? I know they got some history to them. I wish they still made excavators like the drotts because of the tilting turntable, so you could level yourself out with the push of a pedal.
 

Lashlander

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 4, 2007
Messages
1,226
Location
Kodiak Ak.
Hey Insleyboy, Welcome to the forum. I've spent quite a few hours on an old H3500C. It was 1 of 14 made special for the Alaskan Pipeline. They were called Pipeliners. I'm not sure what all was changed on them but do know they had beefed up swing boxes for the steep ground. It was probably the hardest machine I ever learned to operate because of the foot peddles. It had four peddles on the floor for bucket and stick, then the two handles were for boom and swing. The swing was forward and aft. I'd be concentrating on swinging and booming up and forget that my foot was stepping on a peddle. It had an 8-71 jimmy engine and it was a beast.
Insley1Custom (Small).jpg
InsleyCustom (Small).jpg

Deere, I worked for a company that had a Drott 50. The house leveler was a nice feature when it was new. However it didn't seem to take long to get a little slop in the pins. Then the house would get to rocking when you went over the side. This would speed up the wear. Finally it would have to get rebuilt. Then we'd start the process all over.
 

ror76a

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 18, 2007
Messages
211
Location
Michigan
They're problem was Cat, Kobelco and the like were gaining popularity and redefining the operators comfort while Insley, Hydra-Unit...all kept the cheap to produce heel-to-toe type controls and were very quickly a thing of the past!

I have a "late model" Hydra Unit that actualy has modern style controls, it even has a pilot assist system on it. :cool2 And a dozer style undercarriage instead of the old crane style that after you broke a few lugs from digginig over the side wouldn't move 30 feet without throwing a track.
Anyone remember how the Unit's had variable width undercarriages? You would expand them out for stability when working and then pull them back in to make the machine only 8' wide so you didn't need permits to move it. Like the Drott tilting house, it was a nice feature when it was new (or at least in good shape) but could be a major pain when it was worn out.
 

Woodboatdave

Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2008
Messages
22
Location
rhode island
Occupation
excavation/pipelaying
Insley 1500B

This girl stills runs great... they really were bulletproof.
She has a 6-71T and a complete bottom with about 500 hrs on it.
Trying to post a picture, but it won't let me
 

surfer-joe

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 25, 2007
Messages
1,403
Location
Arizona
Cat for sure was late to the game with hydraulic excavators. I got a new 225 on a job in Buffalo, Wyoming in 1974. Never did know why they stayed out of the market so long, other than to speculate that they were concentrating on their core models such as dozers and scrapers. Cat was never first to the party with a lot of equipment that is common as dirt now a days. Pretty conservative at the factory I guess.
 

insleyboy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 24, 2008
Messages
191
Location
Monroe Michigan
Occupation
Operator 25 years, was laborer for 7 years
Thanks for the welcome Lashlander. Yeah the 3500 with the screaming Detroit engine was a beast. Had 3 boom lift cylinders and would all employ when needed. Had an old D8 undercarriage. Never a problem there. I personally broke our swing gear. They had specially made a long reach stick for the C model and after a few years the extra gear if you will, was too much stress on the brake system...Took them 2 weeks to find parts for it. Hey 76a...My first job in high school the boss had the old vaiable width system,on a Hydra Unit.. Seemed odd that more companies did not use that system to reduce permit loads. Manitowoc used it on it's 2900 track model cranes but thats the only 2 I can recall that actually used that technology. Great to be here. Can't wait to post and read from you all on down the line!!!
 

245dlc

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2010
Messages
1,228
Location
Canada
Occupation
Heavy Equipment Operator
cat from american manufacturer standpoint....was a latecomer in the game. the old american made hydraulic excavators....hopto, shield bantam, koerhing, hy-hoe, hein warner, american, hydra-unit, warner swasey, drott, bucyrus erie, northwest, all before cat entered the market...come on dudes, help me out, i know there are more than what i've got here.

Lima had a hydraulic excavator, Poclain, Yumbo/International, Lorain, Massey Ferguson, Little Giant, Universal Power Shovel Company, at least those ones were available in the Canada and the U.S. at least that's one's I can think of off the top of my head.
 

renaud

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 12, 2011
Messages
87
Location
quebec canada
cat from american manufacturer standpoint....was a latecomer in the game. the old american made hydraulic excavators....hopto, shield bantam, koerhing, hy-hoe, hein warner, american, hydra-unit, warner swasey, drott, bucyrus erie, northwest, all before cat entered the market...come on dudes, help me out, i know there are more than what i've got here.
Northwest, Link-Belt, Insley........
Max.
 

Deere500a

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 4, 2012
Messages
208
Location
Castro Valley ca
82 Hopto GM upper, Cummins lower, my dad spent the better part of 15 years operating her, she has been put out to pasture the last 10 years. The trailer is needed to make her weight legal in CA.


1fbbc489.jpg
 

TCS

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2012
Messages
76
Location
ct
There were quite a few truck mounted Hoptos here in Ct back in the day. They were quite popular among water,utility and sewer contractors that worked in the street.
 
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