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Understanding The Cat 320D Undercarriage Configuration
The Cat 320D is one of Caterpillar’s most widely used 20–22 ton class excavators, often working in quarrying, construction, and utility projects worldwide. Like all crawler machines, its undercarriage configuration directly affects traction, stability, and component life.
A key parameter in that configuration is the number of track links (also called chain links or pads), which determines overall track length and how the chain wraps around the sprockets, rollers, and idlers.
On a standard Cat 320D (non–long undercarriage), the factory configuration uses:
Standard Versus Long Undercarriage
In Caterpillar’s product line, the “L” suffix usually indicates a long undercarriage. The long undercarriage variant provides:
Clarifying Conflicting Information From Suppliers
A common real-world scenario looks like this:
What The Machine Likely Left The Factory With
For a typical standard 320D, the original track group from the factory would be something like:
This matters because:
A critical parameter for track chains is the pitch (the center-to-center distance between adjacent pin bores). For many Cat excavators in this class, the OEM pitch is:
Risks Of Mismatched Or Improvised Track Length
Simply “taking a few links out” from a longer 49-link chain to make a 45-link assembly may work in some cases, but there are risks:
When deciding what quality level to buy, consider how the machine is used:
Practical Steps To Specify The Correct Track
If you’re ordering track groups for a Cat 320D and want to avoid costly mistakes, follow a systematic approach:
On a Pacific island project, a contractor imported a standard 20-ton excavator similar to a Cat 320D for foundation work. To save money, he ordered cheaper aftermarket tracks from overseas. The documentation listed:
Caterpillar And The Evolution Of The 320 Series
The Cat 320-series excavators, introduced in the 1990s and evolving into the 320D and later models, became one of Caterpillar’s best-selling medium excavators globally. Over hundreds of thousands of units sold worldwide, undercarriage designs were refined to:
Key Recommendations When Ordering 320D Tracks
To wrap it up, here are practical recommendations:
The Cat 320D is one of Caterpillar’s most widely used 20–22 ton class excavators, often working in quarrying, construction, and utility projects worldwide. Like all crawler machines, its undercarriage configuration directly affects traction, stability, and component life.
A key parameter in that configuration is the number of track links (also called chain links or pads), which determines overall track length and how the chain wraps around the sprockets, rollers, and idlers.
On a standard Cat 320D (non–long undercarriage), the factory configuration uses:
- 45 links per side
- Standard track gauge and pitch suitable for the 320D frame
- Track groups designed and supplied as a complete assembly from Caterpillar
- 49 links per side
- A longer track frame and more ground contact area
Standard Versus Long Undercarriage
In Caterpillar’s product line, the “L” suffix usually indicates a long undercarriage. The long undercarriage variant provides:
- Increased ground contact length
- Better stability on slopes or when lifting heavy loads at reach
- Slightly different load distribution and wear pattern
- Standard Cat 320D → 45-link track chains
- Cat 320DL (long UC) → 49-link track chains
Clarifying Conflicting Information From Suppliers
A common real-world scenario looks like this:
- The workshop counts 45 pads on the existing chain.
- A supplier insists the machine “should” have 49 pads.
- The local dealer offers a 49-link track group and proposes to “take a few out” to make it fit.
- Physically count the links on each side.
- Confirm the serial number and exact model (e.g. Cat 320D vs 320DL).
- Check the undercarriage frame length visually and, if possible, by measurement.
What The Machine Likely Left The Factory With
For a typical standard 320D, the original track group from the factory would be something like:
- Two complete track groups (one per side), each consisting of:
- One assembled link chain (track chain assembly)
- 45 track shoes (pads)
- Bolts and nuts in matching quantities for the shoes
- One assembled link chain (track chain assembly)
This matters because:
- Undercarriage geometry (distance between idler and sprocket centers, roller spacing, etc.) is designed for a specific pitch and link count.
- Deviating too far from that can cause accelerated wear or even derailment of the track.
A critical parameter for track chains is the pitch (the center-to-center distance between adjacent pin bores). For many Cat excavators in this class, the OEM pitch is:
- 7.5 inches (approximately 190.5 mm)
- 190 mm (7.48 inches)
- 0.5 mm × 45 links ≈ 22.5 mm total difference
- Over 2 cm of cumulative error as the chain wraps around the sprocket and idler
- Poor tooth engagement on the sprocket
- Abnormal noise and vibration
- Accelerated wear of sprocket teeth and bushings
- Higher risk of derailment, especially under load or on uneven terrain
- Are the dimensions exact metric equivalents of the OEM imperial specs?
- Or are they independent metric designs approximating the OEM?
Risks Of Mismatched Or Improvised Track Length
Simply “taking a few links out” from a longer 49-link chain to make a 45-link assembly may work in some cases, but there are risks:
- Pin/bushing match and pre-load
The chain is assembled with a specific pin and bushing interference and twist to match wear patterns and bending loads. Cutting out links and rejoining must be done with proper tooling and technique; otherwise you can weaken the joint.
- Symmetry of the chain
Removing the wrong number of links from one side or in the wrong position can affect how the track stretches and runs over rollers.
- Tensioning range
If the assembled length is slightly off due to non-OEM pitch, the track adjuster may end up fully extended or fully retracted to get tension “close,” leaving no adjustment room as things wear.
- Use correct-spec OEM or high-quality aftermarket chains
- Avoid “Frankenstein” assemblies built from mismatched components
When deciding what quality level to buy, consider how the machine is used:
- Hobby / occasional use
- Lower annual hours
- Undercarriage wear is relatively slow
- Affordable aftermarket components may be acceptable, even if life is shorter
- Lower annual hours
- Production / commercial use
- High annual hours (1,500–2,000+ hours per year is common)
- Undercarriage can constitute 50% or more of lifetime maintenance cost
- Higher upfront cost for OEM or premium aftermarket parts often pays off in:
- Longer service life
- Fewer breakdowns
- Less downtime and labor
- Longer service life
- High annual hours (1,500–2,000+ hours per year is common)
Practical Steps To Specify The Correct Track
If you’re ordering track groups for a Cat 320D and want to avoid costly mistakes, follow a systematic approach:
- Confirm model and configuration
- Verify: 320D vs 320DL
- Check the serial number prefix and build configuration
- Verify: 320D vs 320DL
- Count the existing links on the machine
- Count pads/links on each side at least twice
- Standard 320D will typically show 45 links
- Count pads/links on each side at least twice
- Measure key dimensions on the current chain
- Pitch (center-to-center of pins)
- Bushing outside diameter (where it meshes with the sprocket)
- Shoe width (e.g. 600 mm, 700 mm, etc.)
- Pitch (center-to-center of pins)
- Ask the parts supplier detailed questions
- Exact pitch (in both metric and inches)
- Whether their specs match Caterpillar’s imperial dimensions precisely
- Whether the chain is compatible with Cat 320D sprockets without modification
- Exact pitch (in both metric and inches)
- Decide your quality tier
- OEM Cat track groups
- Premium aftermarket with proven reputation
- Economy brands for light-use machines
- OEM Cat track groups
On a Pacific island project, a contractor imported a standard 20-ton excavator similar to a Cat 320D for foundation work. To save money, he ordered cheaper aftermarket tracks from overseas. The documentation listed:
- 190 mm pitch
- 49-link chain for “20-ton excavators” in general
- The sprockets developed sharp hooking on the teeth
- The tracks started jumping under heavy digging
- Re-tensioning became a weekly chore
Caterpillar And The Evolution Of The 320 Series
The Cat 320-series excavators, introduced in the 1990s and evolving into the 320D and later models, became one of Caterpillar’s best-selling medium excavators globally. Over hundreds of thousands of units sold worldwide, undercarriage designs were refined to:
- Balance durability and fuel efficiency
- Standardize track components where possible
- Offer variants (like long undercarriages) for specific markets and applications
- OEM spares
- Multiple tiers of aftermarket suppliers
- Rebuild and re-bush services for chains and rollers
Key Recommendations When Ordering 320D Tracks
To wrap it up, here are practical recommendations:
- Treat 45 links as the reference for a standard Cat 320D undercarriage.
- Remember 49 links typically indicates a long undercarriage variant (320DL or similar).
- Always confirm the model suffix and serial number before ordering.
- Verify track pitch against OEM specs; avoid chains with approximate dimensions if you expect heavy use.
- Prefer OEM or high-quality aftermarket chains for production machines.
- If a supplier suggests using a 49-link group and “just taking some out,” ask for:
- Evidence of successful installations on the same model
- Clear statement of pitch and compatibility with Cat sprockets
- Evidence of successful installations on the same model

