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Extending the Life of CAT Soil Compactor Cleaner Bars with Hardfacing and Design Tweaks
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The Role of Cleaner Bars in Soil Compaction
In CAT soil compactors like the 825 series, cleaner bars are critical components mounted near the wheels to prevent soil buildup between the compaction lugs. These bars maintain the integrity of the compaction pattern and reduce the risk of material bridging, which can compromise density and surface finish. Operating in abrasive environments—clay, gravel, loam, and engineered fill—these bars are subject to intense wear, especially at the contact edges and corners.
CAT, founded in 1925, has produced thousands of soil compactors globally, with the 825 series being a staple in landfill, road base, and embankment construction. Cleaner bar wear is a common maintenance issue, often requiring replacement every few hundred hours depending on soil type and operator technique.
Core Specifications
  • Machine: CAT 825 series soil compactor
  • Cleaner bar material: Mild steel or hardened alloy
  • Mounting: Bolt-on or welded to wheel frame
  • Contact area: Leading edge and side surfaces
  • Wear pattern: Tapering at ends, rounding of corners, loss of flat profile
Terminology Notes
  • Hardfacing: A welding process that applies a wear-resistant layer to a metal surface.
  • Flat Profile: The original geometric shape of the cleaner bar, essential for maintaining tight contact with the wheel.
  • Torch Template: A guide used for automated cutting or welding to ensure consistent shape and dimensions.
  • Adjustment Slot: A slotted mounting hole allowing positional tuning of the cleaner bar.
Wear Behavior and Failure Modes
Cleaner bars typically wear at the leading edges and corners, gradually losing their flat profile and becoming pointed or rounded. This reduces their effectiveness and allows soil to pack between the wheel lugs. In extreme cases, the bar may bend or detach, leading to uneven compaction and increased downtime.
Operators have experimented with hardfacing techniques to extend bar life. However, full-surface hardfacing can distort the geometry and prevent proper adjustment. The most effective strategy is targeted hardfacing—applying wear-resistant welds to the first 3 inches of the sides while preserving the flat bottom and top surfaces.
Anecdote from the Field
In South Australia, a contractor managing a clay fill project noticed cleaner bars on his CAT 825C wore out every 300 hours. He began hardfacing the side edges using a staggered bead pattern and left the bottom untouched. The modified bars lasted nearly 600 hours before requiring replacement. He later built a torch template to replicate the bar profile and began fabricating his own replacements from hardened steel plate, reducing costs by 40%.
Fabrication and Hardfacing Recommendations
  • Use hardened steel (e.g., AR400) for base material
  • Apply hardfacing beads to side edges only, avoiding bottom surface
  • Maintain flat profile to ensure tight wheel contact
  • Use torch template for consistent shape and mounting hole placement
  • Weld in alternating pattern to minimize warping
Preventive Maintenance and Operator Tips
  • Inspect cleaner bars weekly for edge rounding and soil buildup
  • Adjust bar position to maintain tight contact with wheel lugs
  • Replace bars when profile loss exceeds 5 mm
  • Avoid aggressive turning on abrasive surfaces to reduce wear
  • Keep spare bars and hardfacing rods in inventory
Recommendations for Fleet Managers and Technicians
  • Track cleaner bar wear intervals by soil type and operator
  • Standardize hardfacing procedure across machines
  • Train welders on bead placement and distortion control
  • Document bar dimensions and material specs for fabrication
  • Consider upgrading to bolt-on hardened bars for easy replacement
Conclusion
Cleaner bars on CAT soil compactors are small components with a big impact on compaction quality and machine uptime. By applying targeted hardfacing and preserving the flat profile, operators can double bar life and reduce maintenance costs. Whether fabricating replacements or modifying OEM parts, attention to geometry and wear patterns ensures consistent performance. In soil compaction, every pass counts—and every cleaner bar keeps the pattern clean and the ground solid.
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