6 hours ago
Overview of Undercarriage Field Presses
A field press designed for undercarriage service is a specialized piece of equipment used to disassemble and reassemble track links, master pins and bush assemblies in the field rather than in a full shop. Manufacturers market hydraulic field presses rated at 150-200 tons or more, specifically tailored for heavy equipment undercarriage work. These machines allow operators to perform repairs on excavators, dozers and crawler loaders without transporting them to a workshop.
Price Ranges and Market Insight
Purchasing a new track press setup can vary widely depending upon tonnage, portability and accessories. For example:
Why the Cost Is Justified
Several factors drive the cost of a field press:
A field press makes sense when:
A mid-sized civil construction contractor based in Ontario purchased a 150-ton portable track press for roughly US $11,000. They had five tracked excavators each logging 3,000+ hours per year. One season into use, they reported reducing transport downtime (typically 2-3 days per machine) and cutting repair cost by 18 %. The payback for the press occurred within 14 months due to increased machine availability.
Recommendations Before Buying
Purchasing a field press for undercarriage service is a significant investment but one that can yield measurable benefits in machine uptime and maintenance cost control. With unit prices ranging around US $10,000 – 30,000 for mid-range equipment, contractors must assess volume of use, machine fleet size and downtime cost before committing. When aligned with heavy tracked-machine operations, the field press becomes a strategic tool rather than just a maintenance accessory.
A field press designed for undercarriage service is a specialized piece of equipment used to disassemble and reassemble track links, master pins and bush assemblies in the field rather than in a full shop. Manufacturers market hydraulic field presses rated at 150-200 tons or more, specifically tailored for heavy equipment undercarriage work. These machines allow operators to perform repairs on excavators, dozers and crawler loaders without transporting them to a workshop.
Price Ranges and Market Insight
Purchasing a new track press setup can vary widely depending upon tonnage, portability and accessories. For example:
- Portable “master pin press” equipment comes in the range of several thousand dollars: one manufacturing listing shows 100-200 ton units priced around US $5,000 to US $13,000.
- Larger fixed or semi-portable presses rated at 200, 305 or 385 tons are offered by specialist manufacturers for heavy crawler machines.
- A full undercarriage component replacement for a large excavator can exceed US $14,000 for the parts alone, indicating the service equipment investment must be viewed in the context of overall fleet maintenance cost.
Why the Cost Is Justified
Several factors drive the cost of a field press:
- High tonnage hydraulic cylinders and pump systems able to generate the required force to press out master pins or track links under heavy load.
- Structural steel frames built to resist deformation during pressing operations, often with cast or welded supports.
- Portability features (wheels, modular sections) if field mobility is needed.
- Safety features and tooling sets (pin drivers, fixtures, adapters) for multiple machine classes.
- After-market support, calibration and replacement parts for the press itself.
A field press makes sense when:
- You manage multiple tracked machines (excavators, dozers, loaders) and expect regular undercarriage link/pin service.
- Downtime for transport to a full repair shop is costly, so in-field capability provides an operational advantage.
- You aim to perform preventive maintenance rather than reactive replacement, thus reducing overall hourly undercarriage cost. For example, monitoring cost per hour is a valid metric in undercarriage management.
- Renting a field press for a day or project may cost significantly less than purchasing one if your needs are intermittent.
- Purchasing a used or refurbished press can drop the upfront cost by 30-50 % but may come with less portability or missing tooling.
- Outsourcing undercarriage work to a mobile service provider who brings their own press rather than investing in your on-site equipment.
A mid-sized civil construction contractor based in Ontario purchased a 150-ton portable track press for roughly US $11,000. They had five tracked excavators each logging 3,000+ hours per year. One season into use, they reported reducing transport downtime (typically 2-3 days per machine) and cutting repair cost by 18 %. The payback for the press occurred within 14 months due to increased machine availability.
Recommendations Before Buying
- Determine the tonnage requirement: match the press capacity to your largest machine’s master pin/track link force requirement.
- Confirm portability requirements: Will you need to transport the press between sites? Choose modular or wheeled versions if yes.
- Verify tooling compatibility: Ensuring that track pins, links and sprockets from your machine models can be serviced without buying too many adapters.
- Inspect hydraulic pump quality and parts availability: Downtime of the press itself can defeat the purpose.
- Factor in training: Operator and safety training for in-field pressing is essential and may incur additional cost.
Purchasing a field press for undercarriage service is a significant investment but one that can yield measurable benefits in machine uptime and maintenance cost control. With unit prices ranging around US $10,000 – 30,000 for mid-range equipment, contractors must assess volume of use, machine fleet size and downtime cost before committing. When aligned with heavy tracked-machine operations, the field press becomes a strategic tool rather than just a maintenance accessory.