I’ve been looking pretty hard at a skid steer concrete mixer attachment lately and I’m trying to separate the good ideas from the expensive gimmicks. What caught my attention is the scoop style mixer buckets that let you load the material, mix it in the bucket, then pour right where you need it. On paper that sounds perfect for smaller jobs where I don’t want to drag a trailer mixer around or shovel material all day. The other thing I like is that it looks like one operator can handle the whole job if the setup is right. I’m mostly thinking about fence posts, small pads, sidewalks, repairs, and occasional footings. Not full-scale commercial flatwork.What I’m trying to figure out is whether a skid steer cement mixer actually saves enough time to justify the cost. I’ve seen some self-loading bucket style units and some of the specs seem pretty decent, like around 0.3 cubic meter capacity, but I still can’t tell how that translates into real work once you account for mixing time, cleanup, and hydraulic flow. Some manufacturers also break the product line by machine size, which makes me think machine hydraulic output matters a lot more than people first assume.
This video is close to the kind of setup I’ve been watching:
Curious what you guys think. Are these things actually productive in the field, or do they sound better than they are?
This video is close to the kind of setup I’ve been watching:
Curious what you guys think. Are these things actually productive in the field, or do they sound better than they are?
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