What size bucket should I choose for my skid steer?
Selecting the right bucket width depends on your machine's horsepower and the work you're doing. This Standard Low Profile Bucket is designed for skid steers rated 70 horsepower and below, with stocked widths ranging from 60" to 84". For compact skid steers in the 40-50 HP range, a 60" or 66" bucket provides excellent maneuverability on residential properties and tighter job sites. Mid-size machines in the 60-70 HP range typically handle 72" or 78" buckets well for general contracting and farm work. The 84" width suits larger machines at the top of the compatible power range when maximum capacity matters.
Match your bucket width to your machine's lift capacity and working environment. Oversizing creates stability issues and reduces performance, while undersizing means extra passes to move material. Custom widths are available if your application falls outside standard sizing.
Should I order the bucket with or without teeth?
The decision between smooth edge and teeth depends entirely on your primary material handling tasks. A smooth cutting edge excels at moving loose materials like gravel, sand, mulch, and finished soil. It creates cleaner finishes when grading and won't catch on surfaces during scraping work. The tooth bar option transforms the bucket's capability for breaking into compacted soil, cutting through root systems, and handling rocky ground conditions. The heavy-duty replaceable teeth protect your main cutting edge while providing aggressive penetration.
If you regularly switch between applications, consider the bolt-on edge system, which allows you to add or remove teeth as needed without permanent modifications. Many contractors moving primarily loose material choose the smooth edge for efficiency and add teeth later if their work scope changes. Farm and land clearing operators typically benefit immediately from the tooth bar configuration.
How does the low profile design affect bucket performance?
The low profile design delivers specific advantages that improve both safety and productivity during daily operation. The reduced overall height provides significantly better visibility over the bucket when traveling with loads, allowing you to see ground conditions, nearby workers, and obstacles more clearly. This design also lowers the bucket's center of gravity, which improves stability when carrying material across slopes or uneven terrain—a real safety benefit that reduces tip-over risk.
The lower profile makes it easier to get under material piles without repositioning your machine repeatedly, and it allows closer scraping to grade during finish work. You'll notice the difference especially in landscaping applications where precision matters. The trade-off is slightly less maximum capacity compared to high-back buckets, but for most general-purpose material handling on machines under 70 HP, the visibility and control advantages outweigh the minor capacity reduction.
What maintenance does this bucket require?
The Standard Low Profile Bucket requires minimal maintenance, which is exactly what working professionals need. Keep pivot points and mounting hardware properly greased and check that all bolts remain tight—vibration and impact naturally work fasteners loose over time. Inspect the cutting edge regularly for damage or excessive wear, especially if you're working in rocky conditions or handling abrasive materials. If you've added the optional tooth bar, check that individual teeth are secure and replace them as they wear to protect the main edge.
Clean packed material from the bucket regularly, particularly clay or wet soil that adds unnecessary weight and can hide developing issues. When not in use, store the bucket off the ground when possible to prevent rust at contact points. The 3/16" steel construction and welded joints are built to withstand punishment, but basic care extends service life significantly and prevents small problems from becoming expensive repairs.
Why is this bucket not recommended for track machines?
This bucket is specifically engineered for wheeled skid steers, where weight distribution, balance points, and attachment dynamics differ significantly from tracked machines. Track loaders typically have different lifting capacities, operating weights, and center of gravity calculations that require attachments designed for those specific characteristics. Running a wheel-oriented bucket on tracks can create handling issues, uneven wear patterns, and potential safety concerns because the attachment wasn't optimized for that machine configuration.
Track machines also often have higher horsepower ratings and ground pressure characteristics that change how attachments perform and wear. If you operate compact track loaders or multi-terrain loaders, contact Forge Claw before ordering to discuss proper attachment matching for your specific equipment. We can help identify buckets engineered specifically for tracked machines that will deliver the performance, safety, and service life you expect from quality attachments.
How does the welded cutting edge compare to wrapped edge designs?
The welded corner construction on this bucket's cutting edge represents a significant durability advantage over cheaper wrapped-edge designs. When manufacturers simply bend a single piece of steel around the bucket's front corners, they create a weak point where the metal is stressed and thinned during the bending process. These corners typically fail first, sometimes after just a season of hard use, forcing premature bucket replacement.
Loflin Manufacturing takes a different approach by welding the cutting edge at the corners, creating joints as strong as the edge material itself. This eliminates the premature corner wear that plagues wrapped designs and ensures the entire 3/4" x 6" edge wears evenly over its service life. The result is measurably longer edge life and fewer situations where you're replacing an otherwise functional bucket just because the corners wore through. This construction detail might seem minor, but it directly affects your total cost of ownership.
What's the advantage of the integrated wear bars?
The strategically placed wear bars on the bucket bottom serve as structural reinforcement that prevents common failure modes seen in unreinforced designs. When you're scooping abrasive materials like gravel or crushed stone, or when you're pushing heavy loads across rough ground, the bucket floor absorbs tremendous stress and impact. Thinner buckets without proper reinforcement flex and develop what's called oil-canning—visible warping that weakens the structure and eventually leads to cracking or failure.
Loflin's integrated wear bars distribute these forces across a wider area of the bucket floor, maintaining structural integrity even after thousands of demanding cycles. The bars also provide sacrificial wear surfaces that protect the main bucket floor from abrasion. This is particularly valuable when handling demolition debris, rocky soil, or other harsh materials that would quickly wear through unreinforced bottoms. The result is a bucket that maintains its shape and continues working effectively throughout a much longer service life.
Is buying better than renting for occasional use?
For most skid steer operators, owning a quality general-purpose bucket makes more financial sense than renting, even with occasional use. Rental costs accumulate quickly—what seems reasonable at $75-150 per day becomes $1,500-3,000 annually if you need a bucket just twice monthly. A well-built bucket like this Standard Low Profile model delivers decades of service with minimal maintenance, spreading the initial investment across hundreds or thousands of jobs.
Ownership also eliminates the logistical hassle of coordinating rentals, picking up equipment, and returning it on schedule. You can respond immediately to opportunities without checking rental availability or adjusting timelines around equipment access. The bucket holds resale value if your needs change, unlike rental payments that build no equity. Consider that with Forge Claw's free nationwide shipping and flexible financing options, the barrier to ownership is lower than many operators expect. If you're using your skid steer for any regular work—even seasonally—a quality bucket typically pays for itself within the first year compared to ongoing rental expenses.