Hello,
I’ve been researching mini machines and I keep bouncing between what people call a walk behind skid steer and what’s more commonly sold today as a stand on skid steer. I’m not looking for a brand fan club answer. I’m trying to figure out what actually works when the ground is not perfect.
My land is terraced with multiple levels and the terrain is hilly. I have sections that are roughly an 18 percent slope, plus plenty of uneven spots where one track would be higher than the other. The jobs are not just “move mulch on flat ground”. I need to build access paths and small ramps, move stone and building materials, do small excavations for wall footings, and do enough cut and fill to shape a ramp. On paper the stand on units look perfect, like a tracked wheelbarrow with attachments.
This is the general type of machine I mean when I say stand on skid steer, like the Toro Dingo TX1000 in this video:
And the Bobcat MT100 style machines in this overview:
I also keep watching Ditch Witch SK800 content because it seems popular in tight access work, like this real operation video:
For photos and reference, here’s a Bobcat MT100 listing page with clear angles that show the platform setup:
And here is a Toro Dingo track loader product page that shows the footprint and general layout:
My concern is safety and practicality. Some people say “it’s safer because you can step off”. Others say “no ROPS, if it goes over you’re in trouble”. I was even thinking about adding a seat or a belt to feel more stable, but I’m not sure if that actually makes things worse.
If you own one, rented one, or run them on anything other than flat lawns, I’d love real input. What jobs are they great at, and what jobs are a bad idea.
I’ve been researching mini machines and I keep bouncing between what people call a walk behind skid steer and what’s more commonly sold today as a stand on skid steer. I’m not looking for a brand fan club answer. I’m trying to figure out what actually works when the ground is not perfect.
My land is terraced with multiple levels and the terrain is hilly. I have sections that are roughly an 18 percent slope, plus plenty of uneven spots where one track would be higher than the other. The jobs are not just “move mulch on flat ground”. I need to build access paths and small ramps, move stone and building materials, do small excavations for wall footings, and do enough cut and fill to shape a ramp. On paper the stand on units look perfect, like a tracked wheelbarrow with attachments.
This is the general type of machine I mean when I say stand on skid steer, like the Toro Dingo TX1000 in this video:
And the Bobcat MT100 style machines in this overview:
I also keep watching Ditch Witch SK800 content because it seems popular in tight access work, like this real operation video:
For photos and reference, here’s a Bobcat MT100 listing page with clear angles that show the platform setup:
And here is a Toro Dingo track loader product page that shows the footprint and general layout:
My concern is safety and practicality. Some people say “it’s safer because you can step off”. Others say “no ROPS, if it goes over you’re in trouble”. I was even thinking about adding a seat or a belt to feel more stable, but I’m not sure if that actually makes things worse.
If you own one, rented one, or run them on anything other than flat lawns, I’d love real input. What jobs are they great at, and what jobs are a bad idea.