Which Skid Loader to Buy??

Anonymous-0

Well-known Member
I am looking to buy a used skid loader. I am not too familiar with the different controls out there. Which make(s) are the most user friendly? Any makes or models to stay away from? Thanks.
 
I have operated different makes over the years. I think the one I was most impressed with was a John Deere 320 if I remember the model correctly.
 
I like skid loaders with hand controls myself. It is more comfortable to sit on the skidloader when you are not stepping on foot controls and less dangerous too. I currently own a Gehl and love it. A Case would be my other choice. They are very easy to use and drive. Hope this helps. The biggest thing is how much can you afford to spend financially? And how much use will you get out of it? Just some questions to ask yourself while looking around.
Kow Farmer
 
First of all we need to know your budget. I'd get a common brand that has parts availability. I wouldn't get an older New Holland, John Deere, or any machine where you sit too far down into it. You need to be able to see the bucket cutting edge (with a dirt bucket) on a skid steer if you want to take full advantage of their capabilities. You also want good visibility all around you.
 
Check local auctions, on auctionzip. Search for ASV RC30. Amazing little machine, numerous attachments available. If you can get one for around $8500, with under 2000 hrs, and the suspension not frozen, it's a heck of a deal!
 
Takeuchi does not make skid steers for Gehl Co. Takeuchi use to make the track loaders and mini excavators for Gehl but not anymore since Gehl builds there own track loader and mini excavators. Only one Gehl track loader is built by Takeuchi and that’s the big track loader.
 
I got a Gehl too after using alot of others. Hand controls are the only way to go. I can't bend my ankles and manure and mud build up on pedals.
 
Go try some out, most sellers would be happy to have to test them out. See what YOU like and what works best for YOU, not somebody on a forum. Personally I like my bobcat with foot controls as I have good ankles and can control the bucket perfectly with my feet. Others (including my other half) don't like the foot controls and would prefer to have all hand controls.

Soo try them out and see what you like.
 
As others have said the end result will depend on what is right for you as far as the controls, etc are concerned.

That said, as a mechanic who works on all brands, I'll give my input on them in that regard. I work on alot of the older Bobcats like the 743, 753, 853, etc, and have also done some work on the tracked models like the T190 and T250's. Like any of them the wheeled and the tracked ones can be a PITA because of space considerations, but on the mnajority of them the cab raises right up to make working on them alot easier. The main thing is they are extreemly common, and easy to get parts and information on. Like any of them the electronics are prone to having problms, and when they do you either have to find someone with the computer to work on them (something I don't have myself) or take them to the dealership. One problem I have seen there is the linear actuators that control the hydraulics going bad. When they do they are expensive to replace. That being the case your best bet is to find an older one that either has no electronics at all, or a newer one that has nothing but the black box safety system (BICS) system on it. Those are't that hard to work on and aren't all that problematic when they do mess up. Plus you can usually get a new black box for around $250 is problems do arise with it.

As far as the Deere's go working on the ones I have was a royal PITA. I say this because to tilt the cab means the boom and bucket all tilt with it. As a result you can't do it by hand like a Bobcat, so it takes a special tool from Deere (which was extreemly pricy when I checked a year or so back) to jack it up and hold it in place....or you pick and hold it with a crane, like I did. Once up though it opens things up and it wasn't that hard to work on. As far as parts go, at least as far as the ones I had to get, the weren't unreasonablely priced and were pretty much on par with everyone else for similar items.

As far as Gehl, I've got one setting outside now with the drive motor out of one side. On this particular one the drive motor's main shaft and the chain sprocket are all one piece. What this means is that when something happens to the motor, the sprocket gets worn, etc, the motor has to be rebuild and/or replaced. The one I'm working on has been sitting for over year now because the rebuild cost on the one drive motor was going to be well over $3000 because that main shaft was going to have to be replaced, and my customer hasn't got that much money to spend on ir right now. Beyond that design wise the ca tilts alone making working on it relatively easy.

As far as the CAT's go manuals for them are going to be through the roof. Looked into getting a service manual for one a few years back and the cost on it was around $1100. That said CAT's entries into the market all have more than their fair share of electronics on them, and being a CAT, part's aren't going to be cheap. Not to mention you just about have to have the service manual to do anything but the most basic repairs on them because nearly every sensor, etc feeds back into a computer which in turn tells everything else what to do.

Just had a LS180 nw Holland leave here this morning I had done some minor stuff to. Like any of them the electronic parts are PITA, but accessibility to work on them, etc was pretty good. Parts are a crap shoot. By that I mean an alternator bracket for this one wasn't but $11 but the wear strip for the side of the cab was nearly $43.

As far as accessibility goes I worked on I believe it was a Komatsu a few years back where the cab tilted Forward. This opened up everything and made working on it a dream as compared to many of the others. Beyond that my experience with them is limited other than to say Komatsu parts for other machines I routinely work on aren't any worse off price wise than any of the other brands.

In the end I know my customers have Bobcat, and New Holland skid steers more so than any of the other brands. The one thing I have heard about them is that the newer ones with the higher, cab forward design do give a better sight picture to the bucket edge if that matters to you. While I can see the advantages of something like that in certain instances, the way I look at it is operators were doing the same work with the older machines as they are with the newer ones, long before the newer ones were even though of. In other words sight lines to the edge are nice, but in the end it's the skill of the operator that is going to make the difference.
 
I have owned a 960 Mustang for the last 13 years, and that is the brand I'll stay with if/when I upgrade.
 
Well i might as well throw in my 2.5 cents worth here on that .We have TWo NEW hOLLAND LX665's , One with cab and heat and one with out. Why do we have TWo because the older one was stolen wright out of the barn a couple years back on the coldest night of the year right before Christmas . We needed a skid steer to feed with and was forces to rent one and at 200 bucks a day digs into the back pocket fast. We like the New Holland and it has given good service to us , it runs everyday no matter the weather . IF the battery is good and the glow plugs are good then it will start each and every time with out being plugged in as where it sets there is no electric. Took me a week of looking but i found the one with the cab and heat on Craig's list , we went and looked at it ran it and bought it . We did have to put all new glow plugs in it right away . Three weeks later the stolen one turns up and we get a call from the local deputy dwag . We go down to there impound yard and yep it is ours . He asked if we wanted it back. Well gee yes , the insurance then trys and take control and like we told them YOU DO NOT OWN IT AS YOU STILL HAVE NOT PAYED FOR IT Well well we have it sold to bad ya can not sell what you do not own or paid for . So we have two now and we found that we need both during haying season . We have found that for us they are our best choice . This past summer i ran and almost brand new Bobcat and i will take the New Holland over the Bob cat hands down. Now if and again i said IF we had the bank roll we would have a couple Cat's on tracks with the pilot controls as i use to haul them from the plant in N/C to dealers , yea buddy they are nice .
 
We run BobCats, that being said IF you find a used bobcat you like check the brand engine. The preferred is the KUBOTA or at least that has been our experience. The have one model with an oil cooled Perkins that parts are no longer avl. for.
 
I have to agree with those mentioning that budget will be the determining factor. Those of us on really limited budgets look at different things than those with more abundant budgets. It's just the way it is.

FWIW- I bought an ancient Bobcat 444. Belt drive, Onan gas engine, beat to heck, truck tires on it. I'm very, very happy with it. I did have to replace the Onan but I still have under $3800.00 in it. I've been watching and there's nothing else out there I could touch for the money that didn't need a ton of work AND it's small enough to fit in my 1890 dairy barn with the 6'6" ceiling. I'd love to have a bigger one too but the $$$ just isn't there.

I strongly recommend whatever brand you choose that you research local dealers and support. I passed up a couple of really old off brands simply because parts were needed and entirely unavailable according to my research.

And check the stupid tires too! Tires are outrageously expensive these days.
 
Case 1845-C I have one that I have had for a very long time , it has 11000 hours on it and still runs strong , cant beat it or the cummins engine . Just my opinion.
 
About the only place I found the NH to be superior is in loading and stacking. But the 1845C and the 763 Bobcat were radius-arm loaders. The NH actually had better visibility stacking round bales. Otherwise the Bobcat and Case were better machines. Our 465 was one that had the boom recall, we patched them together for a couple years before someone stopped at another dealer and saw the pile of bad booms behind the shop. The one we got it from claimed that we were over-working it. Once we got the updated (grey) booms, we never had any more troubles with it in that department.



We used a Mustang one time, an older one with the T-stick control, it was a monster, you'd have a bucket full of gravel without even knowing it when pushing snow or cleaning up a barnyard.

I haven't run one much since I injured my knee, but I preferred foot controls because my legs didn't go numb sitting on the machine for half the day.
 

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