DIGGER SIMULATOR/SOFTWARE

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I'm looking into doing a 360 digger course and wondered if there is a simulator available for the pc that would help me learn the controls, via a ps2 type pad or the use of 2 joysticks.

anyone know of anything, a freeware app would be great lol

thanks
 
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Digger Simulator has been designed to live up to your every expectation. Operate everything from the small buckets to the enormous bucket wheel excavators and get to know what it feels like behind the controls of the largest 240m long bucket wheel excavators through a highly detailed control panel.

In addition to this there are bulldozers, track-type loaders, dumpers and excavators all available to help you to perform the variety of tasks included. Tasks take place in an open-pit mine and a gravel pit where you will need to make full use of the equipment available to you to complete the job successfully.

The lavishly detailed graphics and the machines bring this simulator to life and using the realistic controls you will really feel like you are in the drivers seat of these incredible machines. Using the different camera views you will have a complete view and keep everything under control!​
 
This reminds me of the Fork lift Simulator I saw in Gamesation tuther week. :p

That is all. :(
 
Seriously if I could operate a digger when I was 8 years old I'm sure you'll work it out :)

Good for you :)

Not spunking £100 of pounds on a course/training, when I can get a good basic understanding of the controls whilst sat on my pc ;)
 
I would have killed for this game when i was 4 years old, my parents always got cheesed off with me digging up the garden with my tonka toys.

Alas i'm now 28 and i don't think it's socially acceptable for me to play something like this.
 
Good for you :)

Not spunking £100 of pounds on a course/training, when I can get a good basic understanding of the controls whilst sat on my pc ;)

Just hire it and get used to it as you use it if you don't mind about the certificates etc (load of old rubbish unless you want to do it "professionally").
 
I want to do it proffesionally.



links ?

or where to search, perhaps ?

Then you'll need to spend the money on training...

(I see why you want to have a play on a game first, a bit like a driving simulator, but it's very unlikely to save you any money...)
 
I would have killed for this game when i was 4 years old, my parents always got cheesed off with me digging up the garden with my tonka toys.

Alas i'm now 28 and i don't think it's socially acceptable for me to play something like this.

Yes it is! :D
 
I dunno, looking at the bottom left of the cover it's got one of those massive excavator things, couldn't you go on a rampage and wipe out a city? That'd be pretty fun, death toll in the 1,000's and no police/army coded in to stop you.
 
I would have killed for this game when i was 4 years old, my parents always got cheesed off with me digging up the garden with my tonka toys.

Alas i'm now 28 and i don't think it's socially acceptable for me to play something like this.

Haha, I used to dig ours up looking for Dinosaur bones :D
 
wow thats insane!

Bulldozer modification
Heemeyer leased his business to a trash company and sold the property several months prior to the rampage.

Heemeyer had bought a bulldozer two years before the incident with the intention of using it to build an alternative route to his muffler shop, but city officials rejected his request to build the road.

Notes found by investigators after the rampage indicate that the primary motivation for Heemeyer's bulldozer rampage was his fight to stop a concrete plant from being built near his shop. The notes indicated Heemeyer held grudges over the zoning approval. "I was always willing to be reasonable until I had to be unreasonable", Heemeyer wrote. "Sometimes reasonable men must do unreasonable things."[7]

Heemeyer took about a year and a half to prepare for his rampage. In notes found by investigators after the incident, Heemeyer wrote: "It's interesting how I never got caught. This was a part-time project over a 1½ year time period." Heemeyer was surprised that several men who had visited the shed late the previous year did not discover the modified bulldozer, "especially with the 2,000 lb (910 kg). lift fully exposed". "Somehow their vision was clouded", he wrote.[7]

The machine used in the incident was a Komatsu D355A bulldozer[8] fitted with makeshift armor plating covering the cabin, engine and parts of the tracks. In places, the vehicle's armor was over one foot thick, consisting of concrete sandwiched between sheets of steel to make ad-hoc composite armor. This made the machine impervious to small arms fire and resistant to explosives; three external explosions and over 200 rounds of firearm ammunition fired at the bulldozer had no effect on it.[1] National Guard units were placed on standby orders by Governor Bill Owens for possible anti-armor support.[9]

For visibility, the bulldozer was fitted with several video cameras linked to two monitors mounted on the vehicle's dashboard. The cameras were protected on the outside by 3-inch shields of bullet-resistant plastic.[1] Onboard fans and an air conditioner were used to keep Heemeyer cool while driving and compressed air nozzles were fitted to blow dust away from the video cameras. Food, water and life support were present in the almost airtight cabin. Heemeyer had no intention of leaving the cabin once he entered; the hatch was permanently sealed.[1] Authorities speculated Heemeyer may have used a homemade crane found in his garage to lower the armor hull over the dozer and himself. "Once he tipped that lid shut, he knew he wasn't getting out", Daly said. Investigators searched the garage where they believe Heemeyer built the vehicle and found cement, armor and steel.[1]

Afterwards, the modified bulldozer came to be known as "Killdozer", although only Heemeyer was killed in the incident.[10]
 
........... looking at the bottom left of the cover it's got one of those massive excavator things,......................

The big wheel on the bottom left picture is of one of those German opencast cutters . I have this simulator on PC and looking at it is one of the best graphics I've seen . Looks very realistic indeed . You operate the cutting wheel , and can zoom in and out of the scene , move the cutter and the whole machine .Even the belts move carrying the coal ,dumping it ready for the diggers.Very good sim for us kids at heart !
 
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