Skip to main content

Monitoring track wear for dozers

A new tool from Caterpillar helps reduce maintenance costs for dozers.
By MJ Woof October 16, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Caterpillar’s new remote track monitoring system can help boost uptime for dozers

Caterpillar is now offering its proprietary Cat Track Wear Sensor (CTWS), which can remotely monitor undercarriage wear to predict wear out, plan maintenance and increase machine uptime. The system is exclusive to Caterpillar machines and is monitored within the Cat Wear Management System. The new CTWS communicates wirelessly to provide critical track link wear information from the machine to the dealer. Timed alert intervals – a 40% wear alert for possible bushing turns, 70% to signal for measuring and replacement part ordering, and 100% for required replacement – improve inspection scheduling and streamline ordering of replacement parts. The real-time track wear status enables no-touch track link measurements, increases fleet coverage by automating inspections, provides visibility to track wear when operating in remote locations and allows for prioritised timing of service visits by helping optimise manual inspections.

Field tested for proven reliability throughout the expected track life, more than 2,000 Cat machines have been shipped with the sensor technology. The small electronic sensor installs in a customised pocket in the track link for protection. Each link assembly includes a smart link, resulting in two sensors on a machine, one on each side. The CTWS survives high frequency shock loads and meets sensor functional and environmental tests. Subject to operating conditions, sensor battery life has been shown to last up to seven years.

The wear sensor is standard on new Cat D5, D6 and D8 dozers, and 953 and 963 track loader models in select regions with planned expansion to models in the dozer line in the future. It can be retrofitted on eligible dozer undercarriages.



 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Frost Control gets the picture
    April 1, 2021
    Frost Control Systems says it has added cameras to its sensor-based fixed road weather information system (RWIS) for improved information accuracy.
  • Skid steer loader - more versatile than a jack of all trades
    February 17, 2012
    The skid steer loader has for many years been known as a jack-of-all-trades. Indeed the term loader can be a bit misleading, as a skid steer is far more than simply a digging or lifting machine. Skid steers, and their more recent compact tracked loader stablemates, are the original powered tool carriers. They are designed to work with a host of attachments, not just a bucket or pallet forks. However while this concept of one base machine and a multitude of attachments has been a big success in North America
  • Sandvik’s Chinese renewal with new distribution
    November 21, 2018
    Sandvik Mobile Crushers & Screens now has a strong presence in China through its new mainland China distributor, Pota Environment (Shanghai). The firm’s novel QI441 Prisec impactor is said to offer unparalleled control, flexibility and productivity as a primary or secondary crusher for recycling and quarrying customers. The machine benefits from the patented Prisec crushing chamber, which has been designed by Sandvik to enable the base crusher to be easily switched between primary and secondary mode. This
  • More satellites, more signals
    July 20, 2012
    Greater GPS accuracy suggests closer tolerances for surveying and machine control functions What happens in the future for GPS surveying and machine control could depend on satellite choice and signals. Right now there are around 30 satellites in orbit, largely built by the US, but by 2012 that could rise to 120 as Europe, China, India and Russia fully enter the market. A chequered history has faced the European's Galileo system. At long last, the finance appears to be in place and the European Commission a