Cat D6 Crawler dozers tech specs
In the midsize range of Caterpillar's long lineup of track-type tractors, the D6 series has been a top performer, with over 26 variants released since its early years in production.
Open canopy and enclosed cabin options
Introduced CAT's first Powershift transmission concept
Fit for agricultural, forestry, and construction jobs
Cat D6 technical specifications
Cat D6 expert review
Overview
This is Cat’s “Swiss Army” mid-size dozer line. D6K/K2 = nimble finish grader with tech baked in. D6N = balanced all-rounder with lock-up transmission. D6T = the muscle: more weight, more shove, still precise with Grade tech. LGP/XL/XW decide how light you float; WH packs landfill armor. If your work ranges from pad-finishing to serious production pushes, there’s a D6 spec that fits.
What’s new
- Transmissions and efficiency: D6N uses a powershift with lock-up torque converter and Enhanced Auto Shift. D6T adds full-time auto shift with lock-up to keep fuel burn per m³ in check.
- Grade tech: D6K2 includes Slope Assist and Stable Blade, plus optional factory-integrated Grade with 3D. D6T offers Slope Assist standard with optional GRADE with 3D.
- Emissions: Tier 4 interim or Tier 4 Final across this era, with SCR and DEF on N, K2, and T models.
Performance & efficiency
- D6K2 (finish work hero): Hydrostatic, automatic traction control, excellent blade visibility. Set up to hit target grade faster with less rework.
- D6N (do-everything): Lock-up converter plus Enhanced Auto Shift helps lower fuel use while keeping a solid push for its weight.
- D6T (production with finesse): Four-speed powershift with lock-up keeps power to the ground. With Slope Assist or 3D, the T still finishes well for its size.
Operator chatter backs the split: some prefer the D6T for ride and shove, others prefer the D6N for footprint and side visibility. Pick for the site, not the logo.
Maintenance & ownership
- DEF reality: Plan for roughly 2–3% DEF use versus fuel on D6N and a convenient 1:1 fill rhythm with fuel. Use ISO-22241 DEF and ULSD.
- Service access and telemetry: Grouped service points and connected monitoring help daily checks and planning.
- Landfill kits: WH variants add striker bars, guarding, and debris-tolerant cooling for tip-face abuse.
In-cab & interior
Pressurized cabs, air-suspension seats, seat-mounted joysticks. K2 stands out for blade sightlines and integrated displays for Slope Assist and rear camera. N and T cabs are calmer than older series.
Safety features
ROPS/FOPS, available rear camera, operator presence logic. WH machines add striker bars, extra guarding, and debris-resistant cooling for landfill work.
In comparison
Within D6 family:
- D6K2: about 13.3–13.9 t; about 97 kW/130 hp net. Best for pads, tight sites, and easy transport.
- D6N: about 16.8–18.3 t; about 124 kW/166 hp net typical. Balanced push and grading, popular as VPAT LGP.
- D6T: about 21–24 t; about 161 kW/215 hp net T4F. More shove; grade tech keeps it precise.
Against rivals (same era):
- Komatsu D65EX-16: roughly 20–23 t; about 164 kW/219 hp. Sigma blade helps carry.
- John Deere 850K: roughly 19–22 t; about 152 kW/205 hp. Nimble with strong dealer coverage in many regions.
Verdict
If your mix is finish > bulk, start with D6K2. If it’s 50/50 grading + push or you need more drawbar without stepping up to a D7, D6N hits the sweet spot. If you’re production-biased or running landfill armor, go D6T or D6T WH and let Grade tech handle the finesse.
Owner feedback: K2 is easy and fast; N is the safe bet; T is a beast, just mind weight and sightlines.
Cat D6 owner rating
2005-2018
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