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| Evolution.
Benjamin Holt (left) laid trackwork for Cat and great-grandson
Peter. |
Judging
by the heavy technological changes in Caterpillars new
T-Series tractors, the next century of tracks is shifting
from a slow crawl into high gear.
Caterpillars newest earthmoving
machines, unveiled late last month and scheduled to arrive
next spring, are designed to be more efficient, productive
and serviceable than before.
Various updated features include
cleaner-burning engines, onboard diagnostic tools, electrohydraulic
controls, GPS earthmoving technology and longer oil-change
intervals that keep machines working hard in the field rather
than waiting for service.
The new dozers bear little resemblance
to their 20th century ancestors except for the way they "walk."
On Nov. 24, the Peoria, Ill.-based manufacturer celebrated
the centennial of the construction industrys first crawler
tractor. Benjamin Holt mounted wooden tracks on his companys
steam-powered engine No. 77 and tested it in 1904 in Stockton,
Calif. He sold his first "Caterpillar" tractors
in 1906 for $5,500.
Holts design, tried unsuccessfully
by his peers, was a significant breakthrough that "started
an industry," says Keith Haddock, author of The Earthmover
Encyclopedia. The ability to distribute weight over more ground
has made tracks a common mode of travel for countless other
construction machines.
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| (Photo
top courtesy of Caterpillar Inc. Corporate Archives; bottom
by Tudor Hampton for ENR) |
One week before the centennial,
Cat showed ENR its latest crawler tractors, the D8T, D9T and
D10T. The 310-to-580-hp machines replace R-Series models designed
in the 1990s. With a typical price tag of $524,000, the new
D8 is the first T-Series tractor in production and continues
a long line of D8s that first hit the dirt in 1935.
Site Concrete Inc., Grand Prairie,
Texas, bought the first D8T from Holt Cat, San Antonio, the
largest Cat dealer in the U.S. At the dealers helm is
CEO Peter M. Holt, great-grandson of track pioneer Benjamin
Holt.
Midwest Cat dealer Patten Industries
Inc., Elmhurst, Ill., has two D8Ts on order, with delivery
scheduled in late spring. According to Matt Lamacki, sales
manager, the D9T and D10T will be available later in about
39 weeks. "Cat has more orders than it knows what to
do with," he says.
The T-Series comes with clean diesel
technology, drive-by-wire control, in-cab diagnostics and
a new "Accugrade" option for GPS earthwork. Retooled
engines comply with federal emission rules coming in January
for large, off-road diesels rated 300-750 hp. The D8T is Cats
first machine to feature its "ACERT" off-road engine,
designed to meet U.S. and European air-quality regulations
into the next decade. Cat now has 120,000 on-highway versions
running in the field, according to Jim Owens, chairman and
CEO.
Company officials claim that electronic
programming helps the engines comply with global emission
standards and makes them a flexible power source for contractors
working overseas. Also, onboard computers double as diagnostic
tools and operator aids. Plugged into optional GPS controllers,
they can digest 3-D site plans and help operators grade within
one-tenth of a foot.
On smaller crawlers, a new undercarriage
option called "SystemOne" is Cats latest track
innovation. Gwenne Henricks, product manager, says it reduces
operating costs by 30 to 50%.
Henricks calls new idlers, cartridge-style
joints and other wear-resistant components the "biggest
thing to hit undercarriages since we elevated the sprocket."
First introduced on the D10 in 1977, Cats triangular
"high drive" undercarriage also helped contractors
get more life out of their tracks.
Cats elevated sprocket stems
from early 1914 prototypes, but the firms legacy wasnt
sealed until 1925, when Holt Manufacturing and competitor
C.L. Best merged. Caterpillar Inc. now is a $22.8-billion-a-year
firm, having shipped millions of machines worldwide and holding
the bittersweet title of largest equipment maker on Earth.
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