Skip to main content

Caterpillar's milling and loading advances

Caterpillar is broadening the range of applications for its PM200 milling machines as well as offering a new tracked loader model. The PM200 milling machine can now be fitted with a 2.2m wide milling drum for special wide cutting applications.
February 15, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Caterpillar's PM200 milling machine can now be fitted with a 2.2m wide milling drum for special wide cutting applications
178 Caterpillar is broadening the range of applications for its PM200 milling machines as well as offering a new tracked loader model. The PM200 milling machine can now be fitted with a 2.2m wide milling drum for special wide cutting applications. The new 2.2m drum is said to offer high efficiency and productivity by reducing passes. Making fewer passes will also help cut fuel consumption. The standard 2m drum however best suits duties in urban applications and milling tasks that require a high degree of manoeuvrability and precision. The PM200 weighs in at 30.9tonnes when fitted with the standard 2m rotor package and its weight increases to 31.5tonnes when the optional 2.2m drum package is installed. There is also an optional dust-reduction package available for PM200 machines equipped with the 2.2m rotor option. This includes an additional water pump as well as additional spray bars located inside the rotor housing and conveyors.

Caterpillar also continues to develop its tracked loader range with the introduction of the 973D. This 28tonner completes the firm's D-Series and features load-sensing hydraulics, joystick steering and a new operator's station with a tilting cab that offers good access for maintenance. Productivity is improved due to the more efficient hydraulics as well as a drive-train that provides 10% more power than the previous 973C model. The machine retains the Cat C9 engine, hydrostatic drive, single-fabrication mainframe, Z-bar loader linkage and oscillating undercarriage from the earlier generation model but benefits from a load-sensing hydraulic system with a new closed centre design. Key to the hydraulics is a variable-displacement pump that supplies the precise volume of oil required for the load on the system, cutting fuel consumption and also leaving more engine power to drive the tracks. The system also allows better simultaneous functions of lift, tilt and travel.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Hyundai’s high performing mid-size dozer
    March 3, 2025

    Hyundai Construction Equipment claims that its powerful mid-weight dozer delivers best-in-class power and tractive effort, precise grading and a range of smart technologies. 

    The new HD130 offers fully electrohydraulic controls and 2D blade dozing assist function as standard. It also has a narrow nose with inline pre-cleaner and large windows for high visibility, as well as a 117kW engine providing best-in-class power output. The tiling cab allows access to major driveline components while the durable undercarriage offers long service life

  • Asphalt paving developments
    March 13, 2012
    US and European asphalt paving needs are different, but some firms are bridging that gap, reports Mike Woof. With a clear differentiation between the US and European asphalt paving markets, manufacturers from the latter are now developing machines aimed at the former. The US and European markets for paving machines have developed along very different lines. North American pavers are designed for high throughputs and high paving rates, having been designed to meet a need to build roads over long distances wi
  • EC530E and EC550E – the 50-ton excavators with ideas above their size class
    October 1, 2021
    All-new machines are also a new size class for Volvo CE, offering a 25% boost in fuel efficiency and a range of advanced features to also deliver a 20% boost in productivity
  • New soil stabilising and recycling machines
    February 29, 2012
    Contractors now have a wider array of stabilisation tools to choose from, with several new units being announced at the Intermat exhibition in Paris.