Skid Loaders: Nimble, Compact and Versatile

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A skid loader with bucket saves you time and muscle by moving heavy loads.
A skid loader with bucket saves you time and muscle by moving heavy loads.
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If you have large bales to manage, a bale fork is a great attachment for a skid loader.
If you have large bales to manage, a bale fork is a great attachment for a skid loader.
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Smooth your driveway with a front-end grader.
Smooth your driveway with a front-end grader.
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A track loader has an advantage on uneven or soft terrain.
A track loader has an advantage on uneven or soft terrain.
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Earth auger attachments make it easier to dig holes.
Earth auger attachments make it easier to dig holes.
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Other attachments make it easier to lift hay.
Other attachments make it easier to lift hay.

You’ve seen them on job sites and landscaping projects, there’s at least one down at the local grain elevator, and your hay supplier uses one to load big round bales onto your trailer. I’m not talking about a forklift attachment for your compact tractor; I’m talking about those delightfully maneuverable, supercompact skid loaders that seem to be popping up just about everywhere.

The skid loader (often called a skid-steer loader) is the ultimate heavy-duty compact loader. Although the concept was born on a farm — the famed Bobcat brand traces its roots to a three-wheeled, lever-steered miniloader designed to clean out turkey barns — the modern skid loader has spent most of its life as a construction, landscaping, and utility machine. Sure, large-scale dairy operations and cattle feeding setups have used skid loaders for years, but until just a few years ago, the skid loader hadn’t made significant inroads into small-scale agricultural operations. We can thank the landscaping industry and its need for so many property maintenance attachments for leading the skid loader to homesteaders and small farm operations.

A Loaded History

The skid-steer loader was born in 1960 as the M-400, which was built by Melroe Company in Gwinner, N.D. The M-400 was an improvement over the original turkey-barn-cleaning, three-wheeled loader because it had more traction and stability with even better maneuverability. Drivers steered the machine — crawlerlike — by clutching the left and right side drives independently of each other, which meant the machine could spin within its own length. The M-400 evolved into the M-440, which in 1962 was also Melroe’s first skid loader to wear the Bobcat name.

Fast-forward through the decades, and the Bobcat name became indelibly associated with skid loaders. Even today, people often refer to a skid-steer loader from any manufacturer as a “bobcat.”

  • Published on Jul 23, 2010
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