Wheel Dozers Dismantled Machines

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    About Wheel Dozers

    A wheel dozer propels itself on rubber tires as opposed to the steel tracks of a crawler dozer. More nimble and mobile than a tracked dozer, a wheel dozer can often double as a wheel loader.

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    Caterpillar Announces New 814K Wheel Dozer Posted 6/7/2018

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    Serial Number7HK00155
    Location: Omaha, Nebraska
    Serial Number5A10217
    Location: Shepherd, Montana
    Seller: Raw Machinery Inc
    Serial Number5A10214
    Location: Shepherd, Montana
    Seller: Raw Machinery Inc
    Serial Number90P551
    Location: Sterling, Massachusetts
    Seller: Gagnon Equipment & Parts, Inc.
    Serial Number90P619
    Location: Lees Summit, Missouri
    Seller: CENTRAL PARTS CONNECTION - MIDWEST
    Serial Number16Z00283
    Location: Monroe, North Carolina
    Serial Number36H1470
    Location: Washougal, Washington
    Seller: Portland Tractor Inc
    Serial Number43N00700
    Location: Hibbing, Minnesota
    Seller: HEPI Dom-Ex
    Serial Number36H005071
    Location: Hibbing, Minnesota
    Seller: HEPI Dom-Ex
    Serial Number85X01378
    Location: Fresno, California
    Seller: Quinn Used Parts - Fresno
    Serial Number85X01071
    Location: San Bernardino, California
    Serial Number85X00480
    Location: San Bernardino, California
    Serial Number4SN00460
    Location: San Bernardino, California
    Serial NumberASX00438
    Location: Mexia, Texas
    Serial Number43E720
    Location: Mexia, Texas
    Serial NumberNA
    Location: Hibbing, Minnesota
    Seller: HEPI Dom-Ex
    Serial Number7BR00627
    Location: Brighton, Colorado
    Seller: 2ND STEEL
    Serial Number7BR600
    Location: Shepherd, Montana
    Seller: Raw Machinery Inc
    Serial Number7BR589
    Location: Iron, Minnesota
    Seller: Ellefson Off Highway
    Serial Number7BR589
    Location: Virginia, Minnesota
    Serial Number92Z550
    Location: Shepherd, Montana
    Seller: Raw Machinery Inc
    Serial Number92Z00377
    Location: San Bernardino, California
    Serial Number92Z00369
    Location: Mexia, Texas
    Serial Number92Z00280
    Location: Shepherd, Montana
    Seller: Raw Machinery Inc
    Serial Number92Z160
    Location: Shepherd, Montana
    Seller: Raw Machinery Inc
    Serial Number92Z358
    Location: Birmingham, Alabama
    Serial Number92Z00150
    Location: Moss, Tennessee
    Serial Number92Z00347
    Location: Hibbing, Minnesota
    Seller: HEPI Dom-Ex

    About Wheel Dozers

    Wheel dozers, sometimes called “wheeled bulldozers,” use rubber tires and often articulated steering to maneuver instead of the steel tracks of a crawler dozer. With much faster travel and lower maintenance costs than tracks, wheel dozers provide good pushing power with lighter material loads on compacted ground where traction is not problematic. They can also travel more quickly to multiple worksites and play multiple roles. Finally, unlike steel-tracked dozers, rubber-tired models suffer less wear from abrasive soils and sands and can be used on pavement without damaging the surface.

    Multitaskers


    Caterpillar 824K Wheel Dozer

    Wheel dozers are much rarer than tracked dozers these days, but can still be found zooming around construction and especially mining sites. A flat blade lets a wheel dozer push and spread loose soil, gravel, sand, and other materials. However, other blade types can scoop, lift, and dump materials like a wheel loader. In fact, many early wheel dozers were based on modified wheel loader chassis. Caterpillar makes a 56.4-ton (51.2-metric-ton) version of its model 834K optimized for scooping coal and wood chips.

    Wheel dozers are often used to quickly clean up spilled material to allow haul trucks and other machinery to be more productive. They can help to keep haul roads clear and clean up loading and blasting areas in surface-mining applications. Wheel dozers are excellent at stockpile duties, reclamation projects, berm construction, and pushing scrapers.

    Smaller wheel dozers—which are still quite large compared to low-end crawler dozers—currently start out at 248 net horsepower and weigh around 48,390 pounds (21,950 kilograms). At the high-capacity end is the Caterpillar 854K, with 907 horsepower and an operating weight of nearly 225,000 lbs (102,000 kg).

    Early Beginnings

    The wheel dozer’s roots trace back to Morrowville, Kansas, in late 1923. Farmer James Cummings and draftsman J. Earl McLeod patented an “Attachment for Tractors” consisting of a front dozer blade and supporting arms. The inventors’ patent included a diagram of the blade mounted on a wheeled tractor.

    However, the wheeled dozer’s heyday didn’t come around until after World War II. R.G. LeTourneau’s mechanically driven, skid-steering Model C Tournadozer, introduced in 1947, used an electric-powered cable mechanism to raise its blade or let gravity lower it. Much more popular than its stablemates the A, B, and D, the C version of the Tournadozer and its Super C variant continued to be developed and sold under the LeTourneau-Westinghouse and Wabco brands until 1972. In the 1950s, LeTourneau devised other, larger inventions with up to five drive wheels powered by electric hub motors run by a diesel generator.

    LeTourneau’s efforts were followed by Caterpillar wheeled tractors that were outfitted with dozer blades, often by Cat dealers by customer request. Notable early wheel dozer models included the experimental Euclid Model 1FPM in 1949, Clark Equipment Company’s Michigan (later Clark-Michigan) model 180 in 1955, the 600-horsepower International D-500 in 1961, the giant 75-ton (68-metric-ton) Allis-Chalmers Model 555 in 1962, the even more colossal 1,850-horsepower Western Contracting Corporation one-off called the Western 2000 (1963), and Caterpillar’s articulated 824 and 834 models in the same year. By the late 1960s, the industry was moving on to diesel-electric drive systems, articulated frames, and hydraulic blade controls.

    Other wheel dozer brands of note included Hough (later International-Hough), German marques Zettelmeyer and Terex, Australian manufacturer Tiger, FWD-Wagner, Allis-Chalmers, Harris, International Harvester, Raygo Wagner, Melroe, and M-R-S (Mississippi Road Supply). Many of these ultimately sold their wheel dozer designs and manufacturing to Volvo, Komatsu, and Caterpillar.

    Modern Features

    Today, wheel dozer models fall into the medium and large size categories. The advent of wireless telematics is as important a development to dozers as it is to other modern heavy machinery, keeping fleet managers apprised of machine location, productivity, and status. Cat’s Product Link remote monitoring and Vital Information Management System (VIMS) are examples of technologies currently in the field. The Cat MineStar System, meanwhile, combines multiple modules to factor in safety, equipment health reporting, and machine guidance, as well.

    Find The Right Wheel Dozer

    Current manufacturers of wheel dozers available on MachineryTrader.com include Caterpillar, Komatsu, and several others. Cat’s 824 and 834 are among the most plentiful models on the site.