![]() ![]() Most front loaders in the United States will hold up to 40 cubic yards of trash and are capable of lifting containers weighing 8,000 lbs. ![]() These types of trucks are equipped with hydraulically controlled forks on the front of the vehicle which are used by the operator to lift and dump the contents of the dumpster containers into the vehicles hopper where it is compacted by a hydraulically actuated packer into the rear of the body. In the United States, there are four distinct types of garbage trucks that we see on our roads almost everyday and each serves a very particular purpose.įront loader garbage trucks are generally used for servicing commercial and industrial businesses by using large refuse containers known as dumpsters to collect waste materials. Over the subsequent years garbage trucks have evolved to become the efficient pieces of machinery we have today. Having an enclosed body made it so trash would not fly all over the place and the stench of rotting trash would not fill the streets. The covered body trash compactor made its first appearance in the 1930's and a revolution in waste collection was underway. With the introduction of the automobile at the turn of the 20th century, garbage trucks became mechanized but they were still primitive by today's standards and were no more than pick up trucks with trash being thrown onto an open bed on the back. As societies grew, the need for waste removal grew with it and pretty soon the carts became larger and were drawn by horses instead of humans. The first "garbage trucks" would have been simple carts that were pushed around by humans to collect unwanted waste. Garbage trucks also known as trash trucks, refuse trucks or sanitation trucks, can trace their roots all the way back to ancient civilizations when people first realized that they needed to get rid of their trash in an efficient way.
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