Clamp Everything, Go Everywhere: The Ultimate skid steer grapple fork for Cat, Bobcat, and Kubota Loaders

Clamp Everything, Go Everywhere: The Ultimate skid steer grapple fork for Cat, Bobcat, and Kubota Loaders

Whoever said “a bucket can do it all” never spent a week staring at a tangled brush pile, a mountain of scrap metal, and a soggy stack of cardboard—only to discover each mess needs a different tool. Beyondtech set out to build one attachment that tackles them all, and the result is the skid steer grapple fork line: a family of clamp-ready forks that mount in seconds, survive real-world punishment, and move anything from hay bales to demolition debris without flinching.


One Frame, Many Faces

At the heart of every Beyondtech skid steer grapple attachment is a laser-cut. The skeleton floor is open, so fines sift away while payload stays caged—perfect for a debris pass-through grapple job that rejects mud but keeps branches, or a lump material grapple session that drops loose mortar and holds brick. Welded gussets back every tooth, turning the assembly into a truly heavy-duty grapple fork that shrugs when concrete curbs or twisted rebar crash down. Whether you run a high-flow Cat, mid-flow Bobcat, or nimble Kubota, the same fork bolts on, connects to flat-face couplers, and heads to work.


Dual Cylinders, Balanced Bite

Many budget claws rely on a single ram and a pivoting crossbar, which twists under uneven loads. Beyondtech uses two equal-bore cylinders in parallel so the lid closes straight even when a telephone pole rests on one wing and a shrub on the other. That symmetry gives operators a balanced grapple fork action with rock-solid stability. Each hydraulic line routes through steel guards, preventing snags as you rake debris across slabs—essential for a safety grapple attachment that never traps loose hose beneath a pallet skid. Internal flow restrictors cushion closing speed; the result feels like power steering with the grip strength of a vise—exactly what crews mean by a strong clamping grapple.


Open-Tine Genius

Because the tines are individual beams—not a solid floor—the tool works like a rake, a pitchfork, and a clamp in one pass. That “skeleton grapple fork” concept delivers real advantages:

  • Pull the fork through a brush heap and you’ve got a brush grapple fork that leaves topsoil behind but captures branches.

  • Tip into loose stone and you suddenly own a stone grapple fork capable of moving riprap without scooping half the hill.

  • Skate under a stack of corrugated and become a cardboard grapple fork for baler prep—no back-drag sweep required.

For finer control, bolt in optional spacer bars and the attachment converts into a narrow gap grapple fork for roofing tear-off or a wide opening grapple fork for mattress cleanup after a flood. One wrench, three personalities.


Built for Every Industry Pile

Recycling & Waste – Scrap yards praise the metal scrap grapple for its serrated lid teeth that bite twisted I-beam. Paper facilities love the same frame as a recycling grapple fork gentle enough to transfer corrugated bundles without tearing strapping. Municipal crews keep one in the yard as a refuse grapple fork for storm-damage sweeps.

Construction & Demolition – Framers drag sheathing offcuts with the construction grapple fork in the morning, then the demo team clamps concrete slabs at dusk under a demolition grapple fork identity. The open floor screens dust, speeding load-out.

Landscaping & Forestry – Tree services pick whole crowns using the tree limb grapple, switch locations, and sort boulders as a rock grapple attachment without removing a single pin. Crews clearing trails latch onto logs using the timber grapple attachment, while firewood vendors call the same piece of steel a firewood grapple fork.

Agriculture – In spring the fork becomes a farm debris grapple hauling broken stalks; in summer it’s a hay grapple fork stacking alfalfa; come fall it’s a mulch grapple attachment redistributing bedding. Dairies value a non-puncturing lid for silage and wrap, making it a soft clamp cardboard bale grapple stand-in when the wrapper fails.


Operator-First Engineering

Visibility matters: the backplate uses an open grid, not a solid slab, so Cat’s elevated cab line, Bobcat’s roll-up door, or Kubota’s wide glass still see the tine tips. Hose guards hug the frame, preserving sight lines. The cylinders nest inside wing pockets, lowering center of gravity and earning the fork a stable operation grapple rating.

A welded kickstand means the tool parks upright; the next loader operator drives in and latches the plate without helpers—true easy mount grapple fork functionality. And because all hinge pins share the same diameter, a single spare in the truck covers every pivot, a key detail for rental yards seeking a low maintenance grapple that stays on the lot, not in the shop.


Productivity in Real Numbers

Crews switching from bucket-and-hand labor to Beyondtech’s clamp report finishing brush removal by lunch instead of quitting time. Recycling yards loading corrugated now cycle trailers before the scale clerk changes shift. Contractors who used to budget a second machine with pallet forks now rely on one Cat with a multi-purpose grapple fork to pick, place, scoop, and clamp—a genuine labor saving grapple and time saving grapple story the accountant verifies every Friday.


Fit Any Loader, Big or Small

Full-size carriers love the 78-inch “contractor” fork, but crews running S70s or small stand-on machines need control, not mass. Beyondtech scales the same engineering to a “mini” line, turning walk-behind units into mini skid grapple fork champs. The mid-sized “compact loader grapple” fits Bobcat’s 60-horsepower sweet spot and Kubota’s turf-friendly track platforms. All share the same universal mount grapple, letting a rental house send whichever unit the customer has—zero adapter plates.


Easy Math for Fleet Managers

  • One hydraulic grapple fork replaces separate brush rake, pallet fork, clam bucket, and slab lifter.

  • A single maintenance kit stocks pins, grease, and cylinder wipers for the entire fleet.

  • Fewer attachments mean quicker dispatch, fewer trailers, and simpler training.

Add in the attachment’s competitive pricing and you have a cost effective grapple fork that pays off fast whether you run one loader or a dozen.


Beyondtech Promise

We back every pro grade grapple attachment with phone-support technicians who build the forks they field. Seal kits ship overnight. Replacement teeth ride the same UPS van as your next Amazon order. And because no jobsite schedule waits, each fork leaves the factory pre-greased, pressure-tested, and ready to clamp.


Clamp, Lift, Load—Move On

Brush, scrap, hay, rubble, pallets, paper—Beyondtech’s versatile grapple attachment doesn’t care what the pile is. Pin it to your Cat, Bobcat, or Kubota, close the lid, and dominate the mess without switching tools. A single grapple fork attachment now does the work of four specialized implements, accelerates every cleanup, and keeps your compact loader bills flowing the right direction—toward your bottom line, not toward downtime.

Grab the day by the debris. Beyondtech will hold on.

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