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Buckets
Buckets do the work that every other attachment builds around. Digging footings, grading drainage channels, loading trucks with gravel, clearing stumps off a back forty — one steel attachment handles all of it. You match the right bucket type to your machine, your soil conditions, and your job, and the hours start paying for themselves fast. Whether you're running a mini excavator on a residential trench or a wheel loader on a commercial site, the bucket is where productivity starts. Equipment financing is available for qualified buyers.
Root Grapple Bucket | Mini Skid Steer Attachment | Hydraulic | Independent Tines | 3/8" Steel | 2" x 8" Cylinders | Toro Dingo & Bobcat MT50 Compatible | 36"–48"
Overview When you're dealing with roots, brush piles, rocks, and debris on the job site, you need an attachment that can handle the mess without fi...
View full detailsLitter Bucket | Mini Skid Steer Attachment | High Capacity | 3/16" Steel | 1/2" x 4" Cutting Edge | Wear Bars | Toro Dingo & Bobcat MT50 Compatible | 36"–54"
Overview When winter hits or you're dealing with light materials on the job site, having the right bucket makes all the difference. The Mini Compac...
View full detailsMini Skid Steer / Compact Tractor Stump Bucket – for Stump Removal and Root Extraction
Overview When you're tackling stump removal, root extraction, or ground preparation with a mini skid steer or compact tractor, you need an attachme...
View full detailsExtra Heavy Duty Grapple Bucket | Skid Steer Attachment | Hydraulic | 9,500 lb Grapple Force | 1" Independent Tines | 1" x 8" Cutting Edge | 1" Thick Sides | Quick Attach | 66"–84"
Overview The XHD Grapple Bucket from Loflin Manufacturing is built for operators who need serious grappling power combined with bucket functionalit...
View full detailsGrapple Bucket | Skid Steer Attachment | Hydraulic | 9,500 lb Grapple Force | Independent Tines | 3/4" x 6" Cutting Edge | Up to 75 HP | Quick Attach | 60"–84"
Overview When you're moving brush piles, loading demolition debris, or cleaning up after storm damage, you need an attachment that does more than j...
View full detailsCompact Tractor Grapple Bucket – Built for Land Clearing and Debris Removal
Overview When you're moving brush piles, sorting through demolition debris, or loading rock and stumps into a trailer, you need more than just a bu...
View full detailsSkid Steer Front Dump Bucket – Extended Reach for Tall Truck Loading
Overview When you're loading materials into a high-sided truck or dump trailer, a standard skid steer bucket leaves you short on reach and height. ...
View full detailsSkid Steer Cake Bucket – Poultry Barn Cleanout and Manure Removal
Overview If you work in poultry operations, you already know the challenge of managing manure cakes that build up under drinkers. These compacted l...
View full detailsTurkey Litter Bucket | Skid Steer Attachment | High Capacity | 3/16" Steel | 3/4" x 6" Cutting Edge | 1/2" Wear Bars | Optional Bolt-On Reversible Edge | 48"–120"
Overview When you're hauling turkey litter, poultry bedding, or other lightweight bulk materials, standard dirt buckets just don't cut it. You need...
View full detailsLitter Bucket | Skid Steer Attachment | High Capacity | 3/16" Steel | 3/4" x 6" Cutting Edge | Wear Bars | Optional Bolt-On Reversible Edge | 48"–120"
Overview When you're moving snow, spreading mulch, or handling lightweight bulk materials, you need a bucket that's built to maximize capacity with...
View full detailsSkid Steer Rock Bucket – Efficient Rock and Debris Sorting
Overview When you're clearing land, grading a pad site, or separating rock from soil, you need a tool that does the heavy lifting without slowing y...
View full detailsSkid Steer / Compact Tractor Tooth Bar – Convert Your Smooth Bucket for Aggressive Digging
Overview Every operator who's worked with a smooth bucket knows the frustration. You're digging into packed dirt, slicing through roots, or breakin...
View full details4-in-1 Bucket | Skid Steer Attachment | Hydraulic | 1/2" Steel Side Plates | 3/4" x 6" Cutting Edge | Reversible Double Edge | With or Without Teeth | Quick Attach | 60"–96"
Overview If you've ever swapped attachments three times just to finish one job, you already know the problem. The Loflin Manufacturing 4 In 1 Bucke...
View full detailsLow Profile Skid Steer Bucket | Skid Steer Attachment | Up to 70 HP | 3/16" Steel | 3/4" x 6" Cutting Edge | Wear Bars | With or Without Teeth | 60"–84"
Overview When you're running a skid steer on the job site, your bucket isn't just another attachment. It's the workhorse that moves material, grade...
View full detailsSkid Steer High-Capacity Bucket | Quick Attach | Solid Back Reinforced Steel
Overview Skid steer high-capacity bucket designed with a reinforced solid back and quick attach frame to efficiently move large volumes of mulch,...
View full detailsHigh Capacity Skid Steer Bucket | Open Back Design | Quick Attach | Reinforced Steel Construction
Overview High capacity skid steer bucket with open back design allows operators to efficiently move mulch, snow, feed, and light materials while ...
View full detailsSkid Steer Tooth Bucket | Quick Attach | Heavy Duty Grade 50 Steel | Reinforced Cutting Edge
Overview Skid steer tooth bucket attachments are designed for aggressive digging and material breakout with reinforced Grade 50 steel constructio...
View full detailsSkid Steer Low Profile Material Bucket | Heavy Duty Steel | Quick Attach Frame | Reinforced Back & Runners
Overview Skid steer low profile material bucket improves operator visibility and control for grading, backfilling, and material handling while de...
View full detailsSkid Steer Rock Bucket Attachment | Quick Attach Frame | Grade 50 Steel Tines
Overview This skid steer rock bucket attachment is built with Grade 50 steel tines and a reinforced quick attach frame to efficiently separate ro...
View full detailsSkid Steer Tooth Bucket | Standard Duty | Quick Attach | 3/4" x 6" Cutting Edge
Overview This standard duty tooth bucket for skid steer loaders delivers reliable digging performance with a reinforced steel body and welded cut...
View full detailsSkid Steer Low Profile Bucket for Grading, Backfilling & Material Handling
Overview This low profile material bucket for skid steers improves visibility and control for grading, digging, and material handling in tight wo...
View full detailsSkid Steer High Capacity Material Bucket | Quick Attach Frame | 3/16" Steel Build
Overview This high capacity skid steer material bucket is built with reinforced steel construction and a quick attach frame to maximize material ...
View full detailsGrapple Bucket for Skid Steer Loaders, Dual Cylinder Hydraulic, Heavy-Duty Steel Construction
Overview This skid steer grapple bucket attachment is built for clearing brush, moving logs, and handling rock with dual independent hydraulic gr...
View full detailsBolt-On Double Bevel Cutting Edge for Buckets | Reversible | Plow Bolts Included
Overview This bolt-on double bevel cutting edge for buckets delivers extended wear life and reversible performance for demanding grading, scrapin...
View full detailsWhat Are Heavy Equipment Buckets and Why Do They Matter?
How Do Buckets Function as Essential Attachments for Heavy Equipment?
Heavy equipment buckets are curved, open-top steel attachments that mount to excavators, skid steers, tractors, and loaders to dig, scoop, grade, and move materials like soil, gravel, rock, and debris across construction, landscaping, and agricultural job sites.
Buckets connect to a machine through a pin-on mount or quick-attach coupler at the end of a boom and arm on excavators or directly to the loader frame on skid steers, compact track loaders, and wheel loaders. Hydraulic cylinders control the curl and dump motion that enables digging and material release.
What Industries and Professionals Rely on Buckets the Most?
Buckets serve 9 distinct operator categories spanning construction, agriculture, municipal work, and land management. Buckets rank as the single most-used attachment category across all heavy equipment classes.
- General contractors use general purpose buckets for foundation excavation and site preparation
- Landscapers use grading buckets for finish grade work on residential and commercial properties
- Utility contractors use trenching buckets at 6-inch to 24-inch widths for pipe and conduit installation
- Tree service professionals use skeleton buckets for root removal and debris separation
- Farm owners and ranch operators use light material buckets for feed, manure, and silage handling
- Demolition contractors use heavy-duty general purpose buckets with bolt-on teeth for structure removal
What Types of Buckets Are Available for Heavy Equipment?
Heavy equipment buckets fall into 7 primary categories — general purpose, ditching, trenching, skeleton, tilt, 4-in-1, and specialty — each engineered for specific soil conditions, material types, and job requirements.
What Is a General Purpose Bucket and When Should You Use One?
A general purpose bucket is the standard digging bucket with moderate curvature, a reinforced cutting edge, and optional teeth for mixed-soil excavation, truck loading, and footing work. Typical excavator widths range from 12 inches to 48 inches. Loader widths range from 60 inches to 84 inches.
General purpose bucket capacity ranges from 0.5 to 3.0+ cubic yards depending on machine class. Weight ranges from 200 pounds for mini excavator units to 3,000+ pounds for full-size excavator units.
What Is a Ditching Bucket and How Does It Differ from a GP Bucket?
A ditching bucket has a wider, shallower profile with no teeth and a flat cutting edge designed to produce clean, graded surfaces. Typical excavator widths run from 36 inches to 72 inches. Beveled side plates angled at 30 to 45 degrees shape slopes and channel walls without disturbing surrounding grade.
Ditching buckets excel at drainage ditch shaping, irrigation channel grading, pond contouring, and finish grading — any task where a smooth, flat bottom matters more than penetration force.
What Is a Trenching Bucket and What Jobs Require One?
A trenching bucket is a narrow-profile bucket at 6-inch to 24-inch width designed for deep, narrow cuts with a high depth-to-width ratio. AR400 steel construction and heavy-duty teeth handle rocky and compacted soil conditions.
- 6-inch to 8-inch widths serve fiber optic and electrical conduit installation
- 12-inch to 18-inch widths serve water and sewer line trenches
- 24-inch widths serve storm drainage and large-diameter pipe installation
What Is a Skeleton or Rock Bucket and When Is It the Best Choice?
A skeleton bucket uses an open-bar or grid design with 1-inch to 4-inch spacing that allows fine soil to fall through while retaining rocks, roots, and debris. Bar spacing determines separation size — 1-inch gaps filter topsoil, while 4-inch gaps sort large rock and root material.
Skeleton buckets weigh 15% to 25% more than equivalent-width general purpose buckets due to reinforced bar construction. Primary applications include rock sorting, land clearing, root removal, and site preparation.
What Is a Tilt Bucket and What Advantages Does It Offer?
A tilt bucket rotates hydraulically up to 45 degrees left and right without repositioning the machine, reducing repositioning moves by 30% to 50% on grading and slope work. Tilt buckets require auxiliary hydraulics at 5 to 15 GPM and 2,500 to 3,500 PSI.
Tilt buckets perform best on slope grading, ditch finishing, and uneven-terrain contouring where constant machine repositioning wastes cycle time.
What Is a 4-in-1 Bucket and Why Do Contractors Choose Them?
A 4-in-1 bucket combines four functions — bucket, clam, dozer blade, and grapple — using a hydraulic clamshell jaw. Typical widths range from 66 inches to 84 inches for skid steers and compact track loaders.
One 4-in-1 bucket replaces 3 to 4 dedicated attachments at roughly 40% to 60% of the combined purchase cost. The trade-off is reduced single-function performance compared to a dedicated attachment for any one task.
What Other Specialty Buckets Should You Know About?
5 additional specialty bucket types serve specific conditions and applications beyond the primary categories.
- Frost buckets use reinforced sidewalls and heavy teeth for frozen ground penetration
- V-buckets create V-shaped drainage channels in a single pass
- Light material buckets have extended capacity at 1.5 to 2 times standard volume for mulch, snow, and feed
- Root rake buckets combine tine spacing with a bucket floor for clearing and collecting root material
- Ditch cleaning buckets offer extra-wide profiles at 48 inches to 96 inches for canal and waterway maintenance
How Do You Choose the Right Bucket for Your Machine?
Which Bucket Sizes Fit Mini and Compact Excavators?
Mini excavators in the 1-ton to 6-ton class use buckets from 6 inches to 36 inches wide with pin-on or hydraulic quick-coupler mounts. Compact excavators in the 6-ton to 10-ton class use buckets from 12 inches to 48 inches wide. Pin diameter and pin spacing must match the machine's stick configuration exactly.
Bucket weight for mini and compact excavators ranges from 75 pounds to 800 pounds. Exceeding the machine's maximum attachment weight rating reduces stability and lifting performance.
Which Buckets Work Best with Skid Steers and Compact Track Loaders?
Skid steers and compact track loaders use a universal quick-attach mounting plate that accepts general purpose, 4-in-1, ditching, light material, and skeleton buckets from 60 inches to 84 inches wide. Operating capacity determines maximum bucket load — machines rated below 1,750 pounds require lighter bucket configurations.
What Bucket Options Are Available for Tractors, Backhoes, and Wheel Loaders?
Tractors with front-end loaders accept buckets from 60 inches to 84 inches wide using pin-on or skid steer quick-attach adapters. Backhoe loader buckets span 12 inches to 36 inches on the backhoe arm and 72 inches to 96 inches on the loader end.
Wheel loaders in the 1.5-cubic-yard to 5.0-cubic-yard class use pin-on or hydraulic coupler-mounted buckets at 84 inches to 120+ inches wide for high-volume material handling.
How Do Quick-Attach and Coupler Systems Affect Bucket Compatibility?
3 primary coupler systems determine bucket-to-machine compatibility: universal quick-attach (skid steer standard), pin-on mounts with OEM-specific pin diameters and spacing, and hydraulic quick couplers that allow attachment changes without leaving the cab.
- Universal quick-attach fits all skid steers and most compact track loaders
- Pin-on mounts require matching pin diameter (25 mm to 80 mm) and center-to-center spacing
- Hydraulic quick couplers enable 15-second attachment swaps from inside the cab
What Specifications Should You Compare When Buying Buckets?
How Do Bucket Width, Capacity, and Weight Impact Performance?
Bucket width determines trench or cut size, capacity determines material volume per cycle, and weight affects machine balance and lift capability. A 24-inch trenching bucket at 0.15 cubic yards serves utility work. A 72-inch grading bucket at 1.5 cubic yards serves finish grading. Matching these 3 specifications to the machine's rated capacity prevents overloading.
What Steel Grades and Cutting Edge Materials Deliver the Longest Life?
AR400 steel is the standard for general-duty buckets, and AR450 steel extends service life by 20% to 30% in abrasive conditions. Cutting edge thickness ranges from 3/4 inch to 1-1/2 inches. Sidebar thickness ranges from 1/2 inch to 1 inch. Gusseted internal reinforcements and bolt-on wear plates protect high-stress contact zones.
How Do Tooth Types and Configurations Affect Digging Efficiency?
3 tooth mounting styles serve different replacement and performance needs: weld-on teeth for permanent installation, bolt-on teeth for field replacement, and pin-on teeth for tool-free swap-outs.
- Tiger teeth deliver aggressive penetration in hard-packed clay and shale
- Flare teeth widen the cut path for reduced sidewall friction in cohesive soils
- Twin tiger teeth provide dual-point contact for fractured rock and mixed material
Which Bucket Type Is Best for Each Job and Application?
Which Buckets Do Excavation and Utility Contractors Need?
Excavation contractors use general purpose buckets for bulk digging and trenching buckets at 6-inch to 24-inch widths for utility installation. A 12-inch trenching bucket paired with a mini excavator completes 80 to 120 linear feet of utility trench per hour in average soil conditions.
What Are the Best Buckets for Landscaping and Grading Projects?
Landscapers use ditching buckets at 48-inch to 72-inch widths for finish grading and light material buckets for spreading mulch and topsoil. Grading buckets with flat cutting edges produce grade-ready surfaces within 1/2-inch tolerance for sod installation and hardscape preparation.
Which Buckets Do Farm Owners and Ranch Operators Use Most?
Farm owners and ranch operators use general purpose loader buckets at 72-inch to 84-inch widths for daily material handling — feed, manure, gravel, and soil. Light material buckets with extended sidewalls increase volume capacity by 50% to 100% for hay, silage, and bedding material.
What Buckets Do Tree Service and Land Clearing Professionals Prefer?
Tree service professionals use skeleton buckets for root separation and debris sorting during land clearing. Root rake buckets with 3-inch to 4-inch tine spacing collect root balls and stumps while shedding soil. General purpose buckets with bolt-on teeth handle stump hole backfill and site grading.
How Do You Maintain Buckets to Maximize Service Life?
What Wear Parts Need Regular Inspection and Replacement?
5 wear components require scheduled inspection on every heavy equipment bucket: cutting edges, teeth, side cutters, heel shrouds, and adapter bases. Worn cutting edges reduce digging efficiency by 15% to 25% and increase fuel consumption.
- Cutting edges — inspect every 50 to 100 operating hours
- Teeth — inspect every 25 to 75 operating hours depending on soil abrasiveness
- Side cutters — inspect every 100 to 200 operating hours
- Heel shrouds — inspect every 200 to 400 operating hours
- Adapter bases — replace when tooth retention becomes unreliable
How Often Should You Replace Cutting Edges and Teeth?
Cutting edges last 200 to 600 operating hours in average soil and 100 to 300 hours in rocky or abrasive conditions. Teeth last 100 to 400 operating hours depending on material hardness. Replacing wear parts before complete failure protects the bucket's base edge and structural welds from irreversible damage.
Browse Forge Claw's Complete Buckets Selection
Forge Claw carries professional-grade buckets built for demanding heavy equipment work. Every bucket in stock meets AR400 or AR450 steel construction standards. You get the right type, the right width, the right coupler match — backed by a support team that knows the difference between a 24-inch trenching bucket and a 24-inch GP. Equipment financing is available for qualified buyers.
What Makes Forge Claw's Selection Right for Professional Use?
Forge Claw stocks buckets across all major machine classes from 1-ton mini excavators through full-size wheel loaders. Every product listing includes exact specifications — width, capacity, weight, coupler type, and steel grade. You pick the bucket that fits your machine and your job, not the other way around.
What Other Products Do Contractors and Landowners Pair with Buckets?
Contractors and landowners regularly combine buckets with complementary attachments to expand capability and reduce changeovers on the job site.
Which Products Work Alongside Heavy Equipment Buckets?
4 attachment categories pair directly with bucket operations to extend machine versatility across excavation, material handling, and land clearing tasks.
- Hydraulic thumbs mount opposite excavator buckets and enable one-pass grabbing of rocks, stumps, and debris
- Grapple attachments handle irregular material that buckets cannot contain — logs, brush piles, and scrap steel
- Rippers break compacted soil and frost layers before bucket excavation begins
- Quick coupler systems allow operators to swap between bucket types in 15 to 30 seconds without leaving the cab
Compact Tractor Buckets
Operators running smaller properties and farms often need versatile digging tools that match their machine's scale and hydraulic capacity. Compact Tractor Buckets deliver the same fundamental scooping and material-moving capabilities while being properly sized for tractors under 50 horsepower. Both attachment categories excel at site preparation, drainage work, and general earth-moving tasks.
Excavator Grading Buckets
Site finishing and leveling work demands specialized attachment geometry beyond standard digging configurations. Excavator Grading Buckets feature wider profiles and cutting edges designed specifically for smoothing surfaces and creating precise grades on construction sites. These attachments complement general-purpose digging tools when projects require both excavation and final surface preparation.
Mini Excavator Buckets
Tight job sites and precision digging applications call for attachments scaled to compact excavator hydraulics and reach. Mini Excavator Buckets provide the same material-handling functionality while fitting machines in the 1-8 ton weight class commonly used for utility work, landscaping, and residential projects. Both serve similar digging and loading functions across different machine sizes.
Frequently Asked Questions About Heavy Equipment Buckets
What Are the Different Types of Heavy Equipment Buckets?
Heavy equipment buckets include 7 primary types: general purpose, ditching, trenching, skeleton, tilt, 4-in-1, and specialty buckets such as frost, V-bucket, and light material designs.
Each bucket type serves a specific function. General purpose buckets handle mixed excavation. Ditching buckets create graded surfaces without teeth marks. Trenching buckets cut narrow channels from 6 inches to 24 inches wide. Skeleton buckets separate rock from soil. Tilt buckets grade slopes without machine repositioning. 4-in-1 buckets combine bucket, clam, blade, and grapple functions in one unit.
How Do I Choose the Right Bucket Size for My Machine?
Match bucket width and weight to the machine's operating weight class and rated attachment capacity. A bucket that exceeds the machine's rated load causes instability and hydraulic strain.
Mini excavators in the 1-ton to 6-ton class use buckets from 6 inches to 36 inches wide. Mid-size excavators in the 10-ton to 30-ton class use buckets from 24 inches to 60 inches wide. Skid steers and compact track loaders accept 60-inch to 84-inch buckets via universal quick-attach. Pin diameter and pin spacing must match the machine's OEM stick configuration for pin-on mounts.
What Is the Difference Between a General Purpose Bucket and a Ditching Bucket?
A general purpose bucket has teeth and moderate curvature for penetrating and moving soil. A ditching bucket has a flat, toothless cutting edge and a wide, shallow profile for producing smooth, graded surfaces.
General purpose buckets range from 12 inches to 48 inches wide on excavators and prioritize digging force. Ditching buckets range from 36 inches to 72 inches wide and feature beveled side plates at 30-degree to 45-degree angles for slope shaping. Ditching buckets produce grade-ready finishes, while general purpose buckets leave toothed profiles that require secondary grading.
How Long Do Heavy Equipment Buckets Last?
Heavy equipment buckets last 2,000 to 10,000+ operating hours depending on steel grade, soil conditions, and maintenance frequency. AR450 steel buckets in non-abrasive soil reach the upper range.
Service life depends on 3 primary factors: material abrasiveness, cutting edge replacement intervals, and structural weld maintenance. Buckets operating in sandy or gravelly soil wear 2 to 3 times faster than buckets in clay or loam. Replacing cutting edges and teeth on schedule prevents base-edge damage that shortens total bucket life. Repairing cracked welds within 50 operating hours of detection prevents structural failure.
Can You Use an Excavator Bucket on a Skid Steer?
An excavator bucket does not directly fit a skid steer because the two machines use different mounting systems. Excavator buckets use pin-on or hydraulic coupler mounts, while skid steers use a universal quick-attach plate.
Adapter plates exist that convert pin-on excavator buckets to skid steer quick-attach, but adapters add 100 to 300 pounds of weight and shift the bucket's center of gravity. Purpose-built skid steer buckets deliver better load distribution, proper breakout force geometry, and full compatibility without adapter-related stress points. Using the correct mount system protects both the bucket and the machine's loader frame.
Browse Forge Claw's full selection of professional-grade heavy equipment buckets — equipment financing available for qualified buyers.