인기 검색 계정
Eric Jumper(@eric_jumper) 인스타그램 상세 프로필 분석: 팔로워 458,559, 참여율 0.92%

@eric_jumper
인증됨 비즈니스Eric Jumper
Connoisseur of heavy equipment related matters
@eric_jumper님과 연관된 프로필
@eric_jumper 계정 통계 차트
게시물 타입 분포
시간대별 활동 분석 (최근 게시물 기준)
@eric_jumper 최근 게시물 상세 분석
동영상 게시물 분석
여러 장 게시물 분석
@eric_jumper 최근 게시물

Working the North Carolina coast with Marinex 2 years ago.

Sailing down 81 to our next job with the 395 💪🏻

We shall prevail.

Was thinking about the Cletrac/Overshot loader this morning after having a conversation with someone yesterday in regards to how modern track loaders are one of the more exhausting pieces of equipment to run. In perspective to iron from 70 years ago, I do believe we have it made.

New 340 all lettered up and ready to hit the dirt 💪🏻😮💨

@rle_enterprises dragging one of the @muschlitzexcav8 D10’s uphill through a roundabout. All those roundabouts be causin them tornaders.

2 years ago, in the cab of @blaschakanthracite’s new 6020B

Caption that’s vague and has no meaning at all in relation to the text above.

PROFESSIONAL DRIVER ON A CLOSED COURSE, DO NOT TRY AT HOME The majority of the time I’ve spent on the ground with a camera, over the course of my entire career, has been “I think I’m in the way” or “yeah im definitely in the way”. The first step fixing a problem is knowing that you’re the problem. Equipment always has the right of way. Especially if it’s a battle between a 150LB flesh sack and a 50 ton hunk of steel. The secret sauce to safety though is having a firm grasp of all the ways you can get obliterated by heavy equipment and understanding their capabilities before even finding yourself in a situation like that. This doesn’t just apply to my unusually strange career. Anyone from a laborer to a company exec should fully understand that this stuff is not a joke. Most deaths or injuries in this particular workplace come from complacency or ignorance. Respect the iron, because it doesn’t give a shit about you.

Some things from the @muschlitzexcav8 archive. Mostly from the 2007-2013 era. The things I’d do to have that 5110 around still…

Quite possibly the most silt sock per acre I’ve ever seen on a job outside of ROW work. This project sits near the top of a hill in a densely populated suburban area with lots of residential homes nearby. The job itself requires quite a bit of earthwork and having dirty runoff here would be a nightmare. So in order to combat mud washing into the streets, sewers and peoples yards, they’ve installed a literal pile of erosion control at the base of the project as per plan. The road is also constantly being swept and cleaned with a water truck. Honestly probably the cleanest job I’ve seen from a track-out and erosion perspective.

The hydraulic hammer is a beautiful lullaby machine and you’re wrong if you think otherwise.