For your dozer needs

SnowJunkie82

Active VIP Member
Joined
Feb 25, 2010
Messages
408
Reaction score
1,163
Location
Champion, Ab
The cosmetics look pretty good. If your going to spend money and time on paint I would suggest waiting until you are ready to sell it. I would however cut the the corks off the tracks. It is unlikely you will need them and they are hard on trailers and typically add stress on the rails, rollers and idlers.
 

Cyle

Active VIP Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2008
Messages
7,171
Reaction score
4,722
Location
edmonton
The only bad thing I’d say is having to deal with SMS as a dealer....
 

LBZ

Active VIP Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2010
Messages
3,068
Reaction score
3,649
Location
Central Alberta
The only bad thing I’d say is having to deal with SMS as a dealer....

And having to work on them. I fn hate Komatsu dozers. Most ignorant things I’ve ever touched. At least the newer ones are.
 

007sevens

Active VIP Member
Joined
Nov 24, 2009
Messages
20,958
Reaction score
16,974
Location
At my Place in Alberta
Looks good
A question Dean, why not a high drive?

Good question, Caterpillar is probably the better machine but Komatsu may be cheaper to fix. However The Komatsu is a cheaper machine to buy. The D8's are heavy and expensive to haul around and this makes the D7 sought after and as such they sell on the higher side. The Komatsu is a decent machine for what I need and equivalent to a D7 or maybe a slight bit bigger at a reasonable price.
 

007sevens

Active VIP Member
Joined
Nov 24, 2009
Messages
20,958
Reaction score
16,974
Location
At my Place in Alberta
The only bad thing I’d say is having to deal with SMS as a dealer....

lots of bad dealers out there. I have time on my side and if its down for a week or two its not the end of my world. This is just a supplementary machine and not necessary to my operation.
 

LBZ

Active VIP Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2010
Messages
3,068
Reaction score
3,649
Location
Central Alberta
For some reason Komatsu seems to like to place the most common pieces that fail in a place that requires disassembly of half the machine. Especially in cab parts. Changing a joystick in a Cat is much more easy than in a 375 komatsu for instance.

You might be ok with yours as it’s a bit older and it’s not being used as an industrial use machine; so long as the maintenance was kept up. I’ve seen a lot of premature undercarriage failures on komatsu as opposed to other brands. Best of luck with your new toy.
 

Cyle

Active VIP Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2008
Messages
7,171
Reaction score
4,722
Location
edmonton
And having to work on them. I fn hate Komatsu dozers. Most ignorant things I’ve ever touched. At least the newer ones are.

lots of bad dealers out there. I have time on my side and if its down for a week or two its not the end of my world. This is just a supplementary machine and not necessary to my operation.

I don't own anything Komatsu, just Takeuchi where SMS took over as dealer. I swear I stock more stocks then them. They keep using the excuse that they just became the dealer (like a year ago). It's a joke. And to order any parts even ground, you have to pay shipping. Never have that at Brandt, Strongco, etc.

Easier if the machine can go down for a bit. Last week I blew a fan belt, called them assuming they'd stock something so minor right? Nope. No part numbers or any information to source otherwise either. And they have a fleet of rental units the same as mine. So I end up having to guess and get it elsewhere, so I end up taking it apart twice because I got the size a bit off. They don't even stock all the regular filters like oil, fuel, hydraulic, etc. Absolutely pathetic. I had considered buying one of their CTL's thinking SMS as a dealer would be an improvement, but it was a massive step down and not a chance will I ever buy another piece of equipment SMS is the dealer for.

As far as Komatsu, I considered their hoe's, but I just couldn't stand how they operated. Ran multiple one's and just hated them so much.
 
Last edited:
Top Bottom