
Beyondtech FieldForge™ — The skid steer agricultural fork that Lets Cat, Bobcat, and Kubota Loaders Grab, Gather, and Move Almost Anything on the Farm, in the Forest, and Around the Jobsite
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Few attachments are asked to do more than a farm fork. One hour it is stripping crusted manure from a dairy alley, the next it is salvaging wind-blown tree limbs after a summer storm, and by afternoon it is stacking fresh straw inside the calf barn. The traditional bucket smears and smothers these bulky, airy, and snag-prone loads; a pallet fork hates uneven payloads; a dedicated grapple stays busy only a week or two each year. Beyondtech’s answer is the skid steer grapple fork family: a skid steer combo fork grapple that couples cold-rolled strength with a hydraulic jaw, creating the single most versatile, year-round pickup tool a compact loader can wear.
A Fork Frame That Won’t Flinch
Beyondtech starts with a fully gusseted, double-box backbone. Every corner is braced by laser-cut webs; side bars tie into a cross tube, turning the carrier into a one-piece reinforced frame fork that shrugs at loader breakout loads. High-stress areas meet an extra skin of plate, so even aggressive Cat two-speed launches will not kink the housing. Downtime-sensitive contractors call it a gusseted frame fork; dairy managers just know it survives gate posts and silo walls that flattened the last brand.
Cold-Rolled Muscle
Under that skeleton protrude perfectly spaced cold-rolled steel tines. Each tine is heat-treated through the core—no surface hardening only. Tips taper to pierce matted straw, yet bodies remain round, so dried manure peels away instead of packing tight. Pop out a broken shank, slide in a new replaceable tine fork blank, torque the lock bolt, and the attachment is back in the bunk before feeding time.
Grapple Power Without Hydraulic Hassle
Above the tine bank pivots a wide-jawed clamp. Cylinders live behind a guard bar, hoses snake through welded keepers, and quick-connect dust caps finish at loader height so winter slurry never plugs ports. End-users praise the layout as a hydraulic grapple fork with truly protected hoses fork and durable couplers fork—no dribbles, no torn whips, no frantic parts runs.
The grapple’s cast lugs nest over bushings; nickel-plated pins carry grease passages, guaranteeing years of dependable hydraulic fork action. An uneven stack of orchard prunings? The clamp conforms. A bird-nest pile of feedlot bedding? The clamp cinches. A slump of crushed drywall from a remodel? The clamp holds, a real secure grapple fork with a wide opening grapple fork ready for awkward trash.
Universal Mounts for Every Loader Logo
One frame, three flange options—ISO for North American loaders, Euro mount fork attachment for telehandler-heavy farms, and global mount fork points for estates that mix decades of equipment. No matter the plate, the fork arrives with welded bosses that drop straight into the carrier; pull two levers and the head is live. From a universal mount ag fork on a Bobcat S650 to a Kubota with high-flow demands, every machine enjoys the same quick attach material blade speed. All ports end in flat-face to match modern aux packages, delivering a genuine plug and play chipper—here, fork—experience even for seasonal operators.
Why Cold-Rolled Tines Beat Fabricated Bar
• Continuous grain structure eliminates weld fractures.
• Surface finish resists slurry pitting.
• Circular profile slides under bulky material fork loads without gouging wood floors.
• Tips can be ground square for manure fork grapple duty or left tapered for hay fork grapple skid steer passes.
In composite, these traits crown the assembly a heavy duty skid steer fork tuned for both livestock chores and landscape supply yards.
Made for Cat, Bobcat, and Kubota — Field Reports
Cat two-speed track loader: operator ran the fork to break a silage wall for TMR mixing, then hopped across the yard to push storm debris into the chipper. Comments? “Zero tine flex, clamp never chattered.”
Bobcat vertical-lift wheel unit: crew cleared cedar slash in an orchard windbreak, praising the low vibration hedge cutter—wrong attachment—no, praising the fork’s stable clamp on uneven terrain.
Kubota compact track: vineyard pulled old cordons, laying vines in rows. Fork tines speared root balls while the grapple tucked tendrils tight. No damaged irrigation lines, thanks to the precision hedge trimmer—again, wrong tool—thanks to the fork’s tip control.
Work in Every Season
Livestock and Crop
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Barn cleaning fork clears daily pack; clamp lifts matted straw like a weed mat.
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Bedding fork skid steer fluffs fresh shavings; tine spacing lets fines fall back for savings.
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Silage fork attachment slashes vertical face for loader buckets, reducing spoilage.
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Feedlot fork skid steer gathers raked manure after a snow melt, saving blade edges.
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Cotton module fork lifts ginned waste bales for compost feedstock.
Green Industry
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Brush cleanup grapple hauls fallen limbs without hand loading.
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Nursery pot fork grapple slides under root bags, clamp stabilizes plastic.
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Mulch handling fork turns brown bark without spilling fines over curb edges.
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Topsoil fork attachment scoops screen spoil but drains dust through tine gaps.
Construction & Emergency
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Demolition debris fork sorts timber from brick; rotating clamp grips odd shapes.
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Storm debris fork lifts mixed shingles and branches.
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Road cleanup fork reclaims loose gravel after grader passes.
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Snow cleanup fork (with added back-plate) carries plow spoils to dump pocket.
Renewable & Waste
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Compost fork grapple blends windrows without shearing worms.
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Biomass fork grapple moves cedar chips to boiler buffers.
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Recycling yard fork stacks cardboard bales; clamp plates offered optionally.
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Pipeline padding fork fine-tunes bedding sand under pipe with no shovel brigade.
Built to Last Longer Than the Lease
Edges ride on replaceable weld-on wear skirts. Pivot seals use industrial Viton compounds to survive silage acids. Pins grease from both ends, ensuring a film even if one nipple plugs. Powder topcoat meets salt-spray tests; yellow pine bark barely abrasions the gloss. All hardware is metric for global parts availability; shipping crates include a service kit so remote ranches stock critical components at day one.
Maintenance is daily grease, weekly hose glance, and edge touch-ups—practical for a low-maintenance trimmer—er—fork—fleet where downtime equals unshipped milk or unbilled hours.
Efficiency You Can Count in Fewer Loader Miles
Every ton moved with the multi-functional fork grapple is one fewer scraped by hand, one fewer bucket roll shaking fines away, one fewer trailer minute idling a second piece of iron. That is why rental yards list the unit as a cost-effective fork attachment; why landscape supply depots replace rakes with the loose material fork; and why dairy accountants smile when sand bedding stays in the curb, not in the manure lagoon.
The Beyondtech Pledge
• High strength fork attachment design to born-ready for overtime.
• Durable couplers fork that seal tight for the loader’s lifetime.
• Long-life hedge blade—scratch that again—long-life tine steel that stands against rock, slag, and ice.
• Labor-saving hedge cutter effect translated into every forkful moved.
Clamp It, Lift It, Fork On
From erosion control straw fork projects on new pipeline corridors to orchard brush fork cleanup each winter, Beyondtech’s BladeGrip line serves as loader handshake to the ground—because everything that leaves the site rides these tines first. And when the operator slides out of a Cat cab at dusk, hydraulics still hissing, they know no second piece of equipment could have matched the day’s tally of chores checked.
Attach. Clamp. Carry. Repeat. That’s the Beyondtech way—making one machine do many jobs, making many tasks feel like one smooth motion, and making every hour with Cat, Bobcat, or Kubota iron count toward clearer yards, cleaner barns, and stronger bottom lines.