Skip to main content

Extra bucket versatility with thumb tool

Solesbee’s, part of Kinshofer, is offering its series of manual and hydraulic excavator thumbs for any size and model excavator. The thumbs allow operators to move from one application to another, such as moving dirt or material, without changing attachments. This versatility is said to increase efficiency for a variety of applications, including land clearing, site preparation, demolition and recycling. Solesbee’s says that it engineers its thumbs with efficiency and safety in mind. The company work
September 6, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
Extra versatility is claimed for the Solesbee’s excavator bucket thumbs
Solesbee’s, part of Kinshofer, is offering its series of manual and hydraulic excavator thumbs for any size and model excavator.


The thumbs allow operators to move from one application to another, such as moving dirt or material, without changing attachments. This versatility is said to increase efficiency for a variety of applications, including land clearing, site preparation, demolition and recycling.

Solesbee’s says that it engineers its thumbs with efficiency and safety in mind. The company works closely with customers to ensure each model is optimised for the excavator bucket and/or coupler, boosting versatility and extending the longevity of the thumbs.

The unit allows operators to grip materials of all sizes that a bucket cannot handle alone and generally require a significant amount of time for clearing. Contractors can grab and place materials, including trees, pipes, rocks and scrap materials, then fold the thumb down to use the bucket. The attachment can also remain on the carrier during other operations.

A skilled welder can attach the thumb to the bucket and book arm or bucket and coupler in roughly two hours. Solesbee’s manufactures the thumbs with high-quality alloy steel to withstand the demanding conditions of jobsites.

Related Content

  • Scrap tyres for more durable concrete
    July 3, 2017
    Earthquake damage to concrete structures can be reduced by using rubber from waste tyres, according to new research at The University of Sheffield. The research team claims that using recycled tyre rubber in concrete can make it five times more resistant to earthquakes.
  • Challenging Colombian tunnel completed
    May 30, 2024
    A tunnel stretch on Colombia’s Santa Fe - Cañasgordas highway is complete – Mauro Nogarin reports
  • Digging It gets down with Hyundai fleet
    October 3, 2018
    Ben Boare is the founder and managing director of Digging It Groundworks – a multifaceted construction company based in Andover in southern England. Boare formed Digging in 2007. “We initially started out doing small groundworks jobs, but as the years pass by we are focusing more and more on the plant hire side of things and our crushing, screening and recycling operation,” he said. The company has historically run a mixed fleet of hydraulic excavators, including JCB, Volvo, Takeuchi and Kubota. But in re
  • Advanced asphalt plant innovations
    November 30, 2022
    Key advances are being seen in the asphalt plant market, with leading manufacturers developing new systems to produce materials more efficiently and with lower emissions, while using more recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) and also offering greater mobility