Compare Every Manufacturer’s Track Loader in Our 2019 Spec Guide
The inclement weather of spring and fall always makes finishing those construction and landscape projects a constant challenge. The wet weather makes jobsites slick and unworkable, and skid steers get little traction on those slippery inclines and delicate work surfaces. That’s why it’s time to call in the mobile artillery — your little Sherman tank on tracks — compact track loaders. Tackling tough terrain and giving extra power are what compact track loaders are all about. Sometimes called rubber track loaders or multi-terrain loaders (depending on the manufacturer), these compact loader/tool carriers are engineered just like your skid steers (including the same attachment plate) but with the added versatility of a dedicated track undercarriage.
Rolling on rubber or steel tracks, compact track loaders can spearhead operations and navigate jobsites with extra flotation — especially in the wet weather months. A dedicated undercarriage also gives added tractive power (great in dozing operations), yet dispenses the weight of the entire machine through multiple track contact points for a lighter footprint. With extra power, lower ground pressure and added flotation and traction, the advantages of compact track loaders are growing on all types of professionals.
Wheeled skid steers will always have their strong markets (especially when hard surfaces, cost of ownership or increased cycle times come into play), but compact track loaders will continue to eat up market share in specific applications (like grade control and brush cutting). For the third consecutive year, skid steer sales volume was lower than compact track loaders industry-wide, and that gap will grow in 2019. We’ve heard sales for tracked machines were in the whopping 64,000-unit range in America for 2018. Skid steers unit sales were steady at around 34,000ish last year.
Manufacturers see the potential. From Bobcat to Kubota, John Deere to JCB, Caterpillar to Case, 13 manufacturers are producing or branding these dedicated track machines today. Large or small, vertical or radial lift, enclosed cab or just ROPS, basic or opulent, suspension or no suspension, low-cost or expensive — today’s market offers a wealth of choices for buyers. Overall, units range from 23 to 118 net hp and operating capacities from 700 to 3,500 lbs (remember, that’s operating capacity rated at 35 percent tipping load — not 50 percent like skid steers). To learn more, read the extensive product and spec summaries on the following pages.