September 2009

Graders: the Choices Expand

Cat goes with joysticks, while Deere offers the choice of a lever and wheel, with the steering wheel always active. Which do you prefer?

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Photo: John Deere

By Daniel C. Brown

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Contractors now have a clear choice in motor graders. If you want a new M-Series motor grader from Caterpillar, you get a pair of joysticks replacing many levers and a steering wheel. But if you buy a new G-Series grader from John Deere, you can have a choice between console-mounted conventional controls or armrest-mounted, industry-standard fingertip controls. With the Deere machine, you’ll get the ever-present steering wheel. And if you choose Deere’s fingertip controls, you’ll have the choice between using lever steering or the steering wheel. The steering wheel is always active.

“With Deere’s G-Series, it’s not ‘one size fits all’—you’re free to choose the control style that makes you the most comfortable and productive,” says Kent Stickler, product marketing manager for motor graders, John Deere Construction and Forestry Co. “And every G-Series John Deere grader has a steering wheel, no matter whether you choose a G or a GP [Grade Pro].”

Caterpillar, on the other hand, says its new joystick controls—first introduced in 2006—have met with widespread customer acceptance. Caterpillar cites video clips on its Web site showing customers giving testimonials to the new controls. “The majority of people are comfortable within the first hour that they are on the (M-Series) machine,” says Wayne Wood, of Wayne Wood Grading in Arizona.

“It was pretty easy to get comfortable with [Cat’s M-Series] machine,” says Randy Gunther, Sheridan County, Montana. “Within 20 minutes I was doing what I was supposed to be doing.”

Photo: Komatsu
Engine strength for the new series of GD655-5 graders from Komatsu will vary from 180 to 218 horsepower.

Caterpillar applied for more than 100 new patents while developing the new M-Series graders, and they include about 30% new content. New features include dynamic styling that opens up lines of sight, easy adjustment of the drawbar, circle, and moldboard (DCM), a high-torque all-wheel drive system, enhanced power management and emissions-compliant Caterpillar C-Series engines with ACERT exhaust emissions technology.

Caterpillar says the new control system opens up the interior of the cab and provides excellent lines of sight to the moldboard and snow-wing area. The cab doors are angled, and the floor is tapered to provide an unobstructed line of sight to the front tires, the heel and toe of the blade, and the DCM.

Top-accessible drawbar-wear inserts and patented moldboard slide-rail wear strips make DCM adjustments much faster and more convenient. Shorter service times reduce owning and operating costs.

Komatsu said it will introduce a new Dash 5 series of motor graders later this year—and the graders will have conventional controls and a steering wheel. “We’re lined up more with John Deere than with Caterpillar,” says Steve Moore, product manager of motor graders at Komatsu America.

Deere’s G-Series
Deere previewed its new G-Series of six motor graders at CONEXPO 2008, and now the new machines are available. With the new G-Series, Deere offers armrest controls on the seat to replace the old mechanical controls that required hydraulic valves underneath the cab. The absence of those valves and rods improves visibility to the ground and to the back of the blade. Deere will, however, continue to offer mechanical controls to those who want them—especially governmental customers.

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The new GP controls allow Deere to integrate aftermarket global positioning systems (GPSs) either from Topcon or from Trimble. “This eliminates the need to put on a Topcon valve or a Trimble valve,” says Stickler. “Our system allows you to work with Trimble or Topcon equally well.”

And now, Deere has begun to offer a mid-mount scarifier. “Our old frame sloped down in front and didn’t allow us space for the mid-mount scarifier,” says Stickler. “The new frame rises higher toward the front of the machine.” Next Page >

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