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LWT
relies
on
John
Deere
Power
for
dredging
toxic
materials.
Excerpted
from
John
Deere
publication
PowerSouce
Vol.
4,
2002

With
a
name
like
Pit
Hog™,
it's
easy
to
imagine
the
environmental
conditions
where
John
Deere-powered
dredges
work.
Needless
to
say,
it's
not
pretty.
Nor
necessarily
very
environmentally
sound.
Yet
cleaning
the
environment
is
exactly
what
the
Pit
Hog™
is
designed
to
do.
Pit
Hogs™
often
work
in
areas
that
most
people
avoid;
radio-active
nuclear
waste
dumps,
arsenic
plants,
ammunition
dumps,
and
sewage-treatment
lagoons.
LWT
designs
and
manufactures
the
equipment
to
endure
the
most
toxic
byproducts
that
industry
can
generate.
This
is a
company
that
got
its
start
two
decades
ago
pumping
animal
waste
from
farm
lagoons.
They
know
their
toxic
waste.
Think
of
the
Pit
Hog™
as a
catamaran
pontoon
boat
equipped
with
a
giant
industrial
vacuum
cleaner
that
recovers
sludge,
sediment,
and
silt
from
the
bottom
of
ponds
and
lagoons.
Although
LWT
markets
several
basic
standard
Pit
Hog™
models,
most
are
built
to
very
specific
customer
specifications.
Most
float.
Some
crawl.
Some
have
operators
onboard.
And
some
are
totally
automated.
However,
one
component
that's
remained
an
integral
part
of
the
diesel-powered
Pit
Hogs™
for
the
past
20
years
is
the
John
Deere
engine.
John
Deere
engines
are
standard
on
several
models,
including
the
PH7MAU,
a 27
foot
Pit
Hog™
Manned
Auger
Unit
(MAU).
The
John
Deere
PowerTech
6068H
engine
powers
a
John
Deere-manufactured
Funk
dual-pump
circuit-hydraulic
system.
One
pump
powers
the
slurry
pump
and
the
other
serves
the
auger
as
well
as
up
to
two
or
three
auxiliary
functions.
The
engine
also
direct
drives
a
pressure-compensated
hydraulic
piston
pump.
"The
John
Deere
engine
earns
its
keep
because
it's
responsible
for
powering
several
functions,"
explains
LWT
general
manager
Jim
Pflueger.
"The
engines
do
their
job
-
and
do
it
well."
And
that
job
is
to
be
reliable.
"Downtime
for
our
clientele
is
very
costly."
says
Pflueger.
"Engine
reliability
is
important
in
this
business.
If a
dredge
fails,
it
creates
problems
all
of
the
way
down
the
line."
The
fact
is,
nobody
wants
to
deal
with
an
engine
problem
while
managing
sewage
or
hazardous
materials.
These
environments
are
often
undesirable
or
unsafe
for
humans
to
work
near.
Not
exactly
a
choice
place
for
performing
engine
repairs.
When
a
situation
calls
for
working
in a
highly
toxic
or
dangerous
environments,
LWT
offers
the
option
of a
remote
controlled
Pit
Hog™,
says
Pflueger.
This
is
where
the
Pit
Hog™
really
has
something
to
squeal
about
because
LWT
is
the
leader
in
designing
remote-controlled
dredging
systems.
Among
the
diesel-powered,
remote-controlled
models
is
the
Hydraulic
Diesel
Power
Units.
These
units
serve
as a
power
source
for
submersible
pumps
and
come
with
the
100-hp
PowerTech
4045T.
Another
popular
remote-controlled
model
is
the
Pit
Hog™
Robotic
Crawler,
powered
by
the
John
Deere
4045T.
This
submersible,
self-propelled
dredging
unit
is
ideal
for
applications
in
hard-to-access
tanks
and
pits
such
as
nuclear
silos,
radio-active
fields,
nuclear
plants,
and
ammunition
dumps.
Need
to
transport
a
dredge
to a
very
remote
area?
Consider
the
Mud
Cat™
SP815.
It's
a
one-truck
transportable
unit,
and
because
of
its
portable
size,
it
can
be
easily
hauled
to
mines
or
other
remote
locations
for
environmental
cleanup.
LWT
manufactures
this
John
Deere-powered
unit
for
Ellicott
Division
of
Baltimore
Dredges
who
at
one
time
powered
its
Mud
Cat
SP815
with
a
competitive
diesel
but
later
switched
to
the
John
Deere
PowerTech
6068T
after
some
convincing
by
LWT.
While
many
of
the
machines
built
by
LWT
work
the
dark,
crude
corners
of
the
earth,
a
vast
majority
can
be
found
in
paper
mills,
power
plants,
and
municipalities.
And
because
they
may
often
work
in
more
populated
areas,
noise
levels
must
be
kept
to a
minimum.
That's
why
LWT
purchases
its
engines
complete
with
residential
noise-reduction
mufflers
from
its
engine
distributor,
Superior
Diesel.
The
engines
are
also
equipped
with
dual
batteries,
a
hydraulic
cooler
and
reservoir,
and
safety
shutdown
controls.
"We've
been
affiliated
with
Superior
Diesel
for
a
long
time,"
says
Pflueger.
"Their
engineering
staff
has
been
very
helpful
throughout
the
years,
and
they
support
us
very
well."
And
the
engines?
"They've
performed
great,"
Pflueger
says.
"We've
been
using
John
Deere
engines
for
20
years,
and
we
haven't
had
any
desire
to
use
anything
else."
See
John
Deere
publication
PowerSouce
Vol.
4,
2002
for
the
full
color
article.
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