Abstract

ABSTRACT Detailed productivity studies were conducted on three distinct crews, all operating the modern version of the EMS Harvestline excavator-based yarder working with a motorized grapple carriage for harvesting radiata pine from plantation forests in New Zealand. Data were collected from over 1000 cycles and used to estimate robust productivity benchmarks and models. Mean productivity neared 100 t per productive machine hour (PMH) on short distances (100 m) and decreased to <70 t PMH−1 on longer ones (>200 m). In addition to very fast cycle times, only 1.5 min on average at 100 m, large stem size contributed to those very high productivity figures. Utilization ranged from 50% to 63%, with line-shifts and yarder relocation being a common delay type given the short corridors and quick extraction cycles. Productivity was 40–60 t per scheduled machine hour. This productivity range is comparable with those obtained by heavier and more expensive purpose-built swing yarders, showing great potential for cost-effective future applications.

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