When a 50-plus-ton Cat excavator fell into a hole in Washington, Pennsylvania, the world’s largest rotator recovery truck arrived to help pull it out.
Even a machine built to upright train cars couldn’t handle a 67-ton excavator lying on its side in a hole without help.
With the 135,000-pound excavator on its side in a 15-foot hole, it took a Century M100 wrecker and a John Deere 470RR built for railroad recovery to do the job.
Caterpillar’s new 19-ton 319 CR compact radius excavator delivers stronger lift, smart tech and stability for tight jobsites, utilities and roadwork.
Caterpillar is putting that century-old design to work in its heaviest tracked dozer yet – and the efficiency gains are incredible.
Caterpillar is positioned to benefit from large, long-term investment trends.
Caterpillar’s Grade with Assist technology helps excavator operators achieve accurate grading with less effort. Combined with Tilt Assist and the Cat TRS tiltrotator, the system automatically adjusts ...
Caterpillar built a real pickup truck after an AI-generated fake image of one spread widely online, drawing attention from ...
In the midst of walking through the aisles with the poise and grace that only a cat has, Louie takes to meowing at people and ...
In the midst of walking through the aisles with the poise and grace that only a cat has, Louie takes to meowing at people and jumping onto the wooden planks for sale. Somewhere in the middle, Louie ...
Caterpillar has noted increased customer demand for compact radius excavators, and knowing that it had a gap between its ...