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How Should Buyers Inspect a Used CAT Excavator Before Importing from China?

Used CAT excavator serial plate and model identity check before import

Buyers should inspect a used CAT excavator from China by checking the exact model and serial plate, cold-start video, engine smoke, hydraulic response, swing and travel movement, undercarriage wear, cab condition, document file, final loading photos and parts-support plan before approving import.

Used CAT excavator serial plate and model identity check before import
Machine identity should be tied to the exact inspection file.

This PRIMA guide supports the US used-excavator cluster and naturally covers used CAT excavator from China, used Caterpillar excavator supplier China and CAT model inspection intent. It links to the used excavator supplier guide, inspection checklist, used mini excavator guide and CAT undercarriage parts guide.

Quick answer: what evidence matters for a used CAT excavator import?

A used CAT or Caterpillar excavator import should be approved only after the buyer sees the exact machine evidence: model, serial plate, cold-start video, engine smoke, idle stability, hydraulic movement, swing and travel response, undercarriage wear, cab controls, bucket and attachment condition, document file and final loading photos. PRIMA can help compare machines and parts-support options, but the page should not imply official Caterpillar authorization, live stock or a ready-to-work guarantee unless current evidence supports the exact machine.

Buyer Summary

  • This page is for importers comparing used CAT and Caterpillar excavators from China.
  • The serial plate, cold-start video and undercarriage photos are more important than clean listing images.
  • Brand names are used descriptively for buyer search and model identification, not as an authorization claim.
  • Parts support should be planned before shipping because used-machine downtime often comes from fitment gaps.

Which CAT model and serial evidence should buyers request first?

Start with exact-machine identity, not a generic yard photo.

A used CAT excavator quote should show the machine model, serial plate or serial area, hour meter, wide exterior photos and close views of the engine bay, cab, undercarriage and attachment. If the plate is damaged or covered, PRIMA should explain what identity evidence is available instead of pretending the missing plate is unimportant.

For CAT 305, 308, 315, 320 or 330 style searches, the buyer should connect the model to photos and videos of the exact unit. The same model can have different year, configuration, engine, hydraulic and undercarriage conditions, so the inspection file should be machine-specific.

Identity point Evidence Risk controlled
Model and serial Plate or serial-area photo Wrong machine identity
Hour meter Photo plus condition comparison Unrealistic hour claim
Exact machine Walkaround and video Listing-photo mismatch
Used CAT excavator cold start video evidence in equipment yard
Cold-start evidence reveals smoke, noise and idle behavior.

How should cold start, engine and hydraulic movement be checked?

A strong inspection file shows the machine before and after start-up.

The video should begin before ignition, then show cold start, smoke, idle stability, abnormal noise, hydraulic movement, swing, travel and bucket operation. A short warm-running clip is weaker evidence because it hides start behavior and early smoke.

Hydraulic response should be compared with engine sound and undercarriage movement. Slow boom, weak travel or swing issues can come from pump, valve, motor, cylinder, oil or wear, so PRIMA should describe visible symptoms rather than naming one failed part without evidence.

Test Visible proof Buyer decision
Cold start Video before ignition Smoke and starting behavior
Hydraulics Boom, arm, bucket, swing System response
Travel Forward, reverse and turning Drive and undercarriage risk
CAT excavator undercarriage wear inspection with track roller and sprocket
Undercarriage wear controls landed repair cost.

What undercarriage and parts-support evidence lowers landed risk?

A used excavator can be cheap to buy and expensive to repair if wear is hidden.

Track chain, roller, idler, sprocket, shoe width and undercarriage wear should be photographed from both sides. The buyer should request close-ups of rollers, sprocket teeth, track tension, visible cracks, welds and leaks. This is especially important when the machine will work immediately after arrival.

PRIMA’s parts support path can help buyers plan track roller, idler, sprocket, track chain, hydraulic pump, final drive and engine-part sourcing. The support plan should still be evidence-led; brand/model names alone do not guarantee fitment.

Wear area Photo needed Why it matters
Track chain Side view and close-up High replacement cost
Rollers/idlers Both sides Wear and leaks
Parts support Fitment file Downtime planning
Used Caterpillar excavator hydraulic movement and swing test before export
Hydraulic movement should be shown before approval.

Which export proof should be saved before shipment?

The final proof file should connect the inspected CAT excavator to the loaded machine.

Before shipment, PRIMA should provide final walkaround photos, loading photos, document plan and visible machine identity where available. If repairs or accepted defects are part of the deal, they should be recorded in the quote file before deposit.

The receiving team should compare the arrived machine with the final photo file. This helps avoid disputes about machine identity, missing attachments, changed condition or document gaps.

Export step Proof Buyer value
Before deposit Inspection file Risk agreement
Before loading Final photos Same-machine proof
After arrival Compare file Receiving control
Used CAT excavator export loading proof before shipment from China
Final loading photos connect inspection to export.

Evidence Table

Buyer question Evidence PRIMA should provide Why it matters
Is the machine identity clear? Model, serial area, hour meter and exact-machine photos Avoids listing mismatch
Does the engine start acceptably? Cold-start video, smoke and idle evidence Finds repair risk
Is the undercarriage worn? Track chain, roller, idler and sprocket photos Controls landed repair cost
Is export proof complete? Final walkaround, loading photos and document plan Connects inspection to shipment

Key Facts For PRIMA Buyers

  • PRIMA uses CAT and Caterpillar descriptively for model and buyer-search identification only.
  • Cold-start video is stronger used-machine evidence than warm idle photos.
  • Used excavator import approval should include undercarriage wear and parts-support planning.
  • Final loading photos help prove the shipped machine matches the inspected machine.

Buyer FAQ

Can buyers rely on the CAT model name alone?

No. The exact machine, serial evidence, condition photos and video are required.

Does PRIMA claim to be an authorized Caterpillar dealer?

No. This page uses CAT and Caterpillar only for descriptive model and compatibility context.

What video is most useful?

A cold-start video with engine sound, smoke, hydraulics, swing and travel movement.

Why plan parts support before import?

Used machines often need wear-part or hydraulic support after arrival, and fitment evidence reduces downtime.

Conclusion

A used CAT excavator import should be approved through a machine-specific proof file. PRIMA's safer workflow is to verify identity, cold start, hydraulics, undercarriage, parts support and final loading before the buyer commits.

References