Bobcat Bob-Tach Guide • Canada

Bob-Tach Compatible Attachments: What Works, What Doesn't, and Why It Costs More Than It Should

Bob-Tach is Bobcat's proprietary quick-attach system — and it's the reason Bobcat owners sometimes end up paying more for attachments than operators on other machines. Here's the full picture: what Bob-Tach physically is, how it differs from universal SSQA, what adapter plates actually do (and don't do), and what Canadian operators need to know when buying used attachments.

What Bob-Tach Actually Is

Bob-Tach is Bobcat Company's branded quick-attach coupler system. Bobcat developed it in the 1970s, patented the design, and built it into every skid steer they've made since. The name is a Bobcat trademark — you won't see other manufacturers calling their system "Bob-Tach," even though the underlying geometry became an industry standard.

Here's the thing that confuses a lot of operators: the SAE J2513 standard — the official engineering standard for skid steer quick attach couplers — is largely derived from the Bob-Tach geometry. Bobcat's proprietary design became so dominant that the industry standardized around it. So in a technical sense, Bob-Tach and SSQA (Standard Skid Steer Quick Attach) are closely related.

But "closely related" is not the same as "identical." There are meaningful physical differences. And those differences are what create the compatibility headaches Canadian operators run into when trying to run non-Bobcat attachments on Bobcat machines — or Bobcat attachments on other machines.

The two-minute version: Most modern full-size Bobcat machines (S series, T series, current production) use a coupler that is functionally compatible with SSQA attachments. But older Bobcat machines, some current models, and all mini Bobcats use coupler dimensions that don't match universal SSQA. Know which machine you're dealing with before you assume any attachment will fit.

Bob-Tach vs Universal SSQA — The Physical Difference

Both systems use the same basic concept: a plate on the attachment engages with a receiver frame on the machine, and locking pins or wedges hold everything together. The critical dimensions differ in ways that matter:

Bob-Tach (Bobcat)

  • Top hooks engage a cross-bar on the attachment plate
  • Wedge-pin locking mechanism — two vertical pins drive down through the plate to lock
  • Manual Bob-Tach: operator exits cab and drives pins by hand
  • Power Bob-Tach: cab-controlled hydraulic pin actuation (premium option)
  • Older/smaller machines: narrower plate dimensions that don't match full-size SSQA
  • Full-size current machines: compatible with SSQA geometry in most cases, but Bobcat won't officially certify third-party attachments

Universal SSQA

  • Top hooks engage a cross-bar — same concept as Bob-Tach
  • Latch bars lock along the bottom of the plate — bar-latch vs wedge-pin
  • Used by Kubota, New Holland, Case, John Deere, Gehl, Manitou, and most others
  • Dimensions standardized under SAE J2513
  • Third-party attachments explicitly designed and marketed as "SSQA compatible"
  • No proprietary locking mechanism — simpler, more universal, typically lower replacement cost

The practical implication: a current full-size Bobcat (S70 through S850, T76, T870) will physically accept most universal SSQA attachments. The geometry overlaps enough that it works. But Bobcat doesn't advertise this, doesn't certify it, and will remind you enthusiastically about their proprietary attachment ecosystem whenever they can.

What absolutely won't work without adapters: small Bobcat machines. The S70, MT-series mini skid steers, and older pre-2000s Bobcats used a narrower plate profile that is genuinely incompatible with full-size SSQA. If you're running an older Bobcat 753 or a newer S70, the plate dimensions don't match full-size SSQA. Period.

Bobcat Machine Category Coupler Type SSQA Compatible (no adapter)? Notes
Current full-size skid steers (S450+, S510–S850) Bob-Tach (std or Power Bob-Tach) MOSTLY YES Geometry compatible in most cases; Bobcat doesn't certify third-party use
Current full-size CTLs (T450+, T550–T870) Bob-Tach (std or Power) MOSTLY YES Same as above — compatible in practice, not officially certified
Older full-size (pre-2000, 753/773/863 era) Bob-Tach VERIFY FIRST Some older machines had narrower pin spacing; confirm specific model before ordering
Small Bobcat S70 Bobcat small-frame Bob-Tach NO Narrower plate format — requires small-frame specific attachments
Bobcat MT mini skid steers (MT55, MT85, MT100) Bobcat MT proprietary NO Different geometry entirely — mini skid steer attachments only

Brands That Make Native Bob-Tach Attachments

These suppliers build attachments specifically to the Bob-Tach plate format — either exclusively or as a configuration option. Buying native Bob-Tach means no adapters, no weight penalty, no guesswork:

Bobcat OEM

Obviously. Bobcat's own attachment line — buckets, grapples, auger drives, snow pushers, cold planers, bale spears — are all native Bob-Tach. They're also the most expensive option on the market. A Bobcat OEM 72" GP bucket runs $2,800–$3,500 CAD. Comparable third-party SSQA buckets run $800–$1,500. The Bobcat name commands a premium that isn't always justified by the product.

HLA Attachments

HLA (Highline Manufacturing, Listowel, Ontario) makes some products in Bob-Tach format, or with plates that accommodate both formats. Their snow pushers and some bucket configurations are available in Bob-Tach fitment. Canadian-made, dealer network across the country. HLA is worth calling before assuming you need an adapter.

TMG Industrial

TMG makes budget attachments sold across Canada — attachments run $400–$1,200 CAD for common items like rock buckets and grapples. Some TMG product lines offer Bob-Tach plate configurations. Quality is adequate for light-to-medium farm use; not the right tool for contractor-intensity work. Check their product listings carefully — not all TMG products come in Bob-Tach, and not all TMG products are the same quality tier.

Paladin / Blue Diamond / Virnig (with Bob-Tach option)

Several US-based attachment manufacturers offer Bob-Tach mounting plates as a factory option on their attachments. You order the attachment, specify "Bob-Tach mounting," and it ships with the correct plate format. This costs the same or slightly more than SSQA versions of the same product. For Canadian buyers, import costs and duties apply — factor that in against domestic options.

What to ask before buying any third-party "Bob-Tach compatible" attachment: Is the mounting plate actual Bob-Tach format, or is it SSQA format with a note that it "also works with Bobcat"? These are different things. Confirm the plate dimensions match your specific Bobcat model before completing the purchase.

Adapter Plates — What They Cost, What They Do, and the Safety Conversation

Adapter plates exist to solve the following problem: you have a Bobcat (Bob-Tach machine) and you want to run a universal SSQA attachment, or vice versa. An adapter plate mounts on the machine side and provides the correct interface for a different attachment format.

Cost Range in Canada

Bob-Tach to SSQA adapter plates (machine-side, lets you run SSQA attachments on a Bobcat) run approximately:

Weight Penalty

This is real and under-discussed. An adapter plate adds 60–120 lbs to the front of the machine, depending on the design. That weight comes directly off your effective payload capacity. On a Bobcat S550 with a 1,450 lb ROC, a 100 lb adapter plate means you're working at 1,350 lbs effective lift capacity before you even pick anything up. For light farm work, this doesn't matter. For operators near the rated capacity limit, it's a real consideration.

The weight also changes the machine's balance. Rear-heavy attachments — heavy grapples, large tree spades — that are already challenging near capacity become more so with an additional adapter hanging on the front. Not a disaster, but worth knowing.

The Safety Conversation

This is where the forum arguments happen. Opinions range from "adapter plates are fine" to "they're a liability and I won't run them." The honest answer is in the middle.

Safety concerns with adapter plates — the real issues:

For farm use — moving bales, grading a driveway, loading aggregate — a well-made adapter plate used by a diligent operator who inspects it regularly is generally acceptable. For worksite use in regulated environments where dropped-attachment incidents have legal consequences, the certified attachment path is cleaner. Use adapter plates knowingly, not because you didn't realize there was a better option.

The One Thing That Kills Cheap Adapters Fast

Hydraulic breakers. A breaker transmits huge impact loads through the coupler on every stroke — typically 400–1,000 impacts per minute. Cheap adapter plates weren't designed for that. Bolts work loose, welds crack, latch mechanisms wear faster than they should. If you're running a hydraulic breaker through an adapter plate regularly, use a heavy-duty commercial adapter — not the $180 import special — and inspect it before every session.

The Ecosystem Lock — How Bobcat Operators End Up Paying More

Nobody decides to build a Bob-Tach attachment collection on purpose. It happens gradually. Here's the pattern:

  1. You buy a used Bobcat. Good deal, well-maintained, right size for the work.
  2. You need a bucket. The Bobcat dealer sells you a Bobcat bucket. It fits perfectly, the dealer stocks it, and you need to work next week — not wait for a third-party order to arrive.
  3. You add a grapple. Same story. Bobcat dealer, Bobcat part, higher price than comparable SSQA options but immediate availability.
  4. Two or three attachment purchases in, you have $6,000 in Bob-Tach specific gear. Now you're somewhat committed — switching to an SSQA machine means either buying adapter plates for all your existing stuff or selling the attachments and starting over.

This isn't malicious design. It's just how ecosystem lock-in works. The attachment fits perfectly because it was designed for the machine. The dealer stocks it because they're a Bobcat dealer. The premium feels acceptable in the moment of purchase because you're buying a machine attachment, not a consumer electronic. And then it adds up.

Operators who avoid this trap tend to do one of two things: buy an SSQA-native machine (New Holland, Kubota, Case — all use SSQA without qualification), or buy a used Bobcat and immediately get an adapter plate so they can access the full SSQA attachment market from day one.

Worth noting: If you're in construction and already have a large attachment fleet, Bobcat is well-represented in the Canadian rental and used market — T595, T595, S590, and S650 machines show up constantly on Kijiji and at Ritchie Bros. in all three prairie provinces and Ontario. The machine quality and resale value are legitimate. Just go in with eyes open about the attachment ecosystem.

Buying Used Bob-Tach Attachments on Kijiji Canada

The used Bob-Tach attachment market in Canada is real and reasonably active, particularly in Alberta, Ontario, and Saskatchewan where Bobcat density is high. What you'll find:

What Shows Up on Kijiji

What's Hard to Find Used

Bob-Tach native versions of specialty attachments — cold planers, tree spades, drum mulchers — are rare in the used private market. These items usually come from Bobcat dealers or contractor liquidations at auction. Ritchie Bros. unreserved auctions (Nisku, AB and Innisfil, ON are the largest) occasionally surface specialty Bob-Tach attachments at prices worth watching.

Kijiji Buyer Verification Checklist

Before handing over money for a used Bob-Tach attachment:

When the Adapter Makes Sense — and When It Doesn't

Scenario 1: You own a Bobcat, have zero attachments, starting fresh

Buy a high-quality Bob-Tach to SSQA adapter plate ($400–$600 CAD) and shop the entire SSQA attachment market. You'll have access to far more options at better prices than the Bob-Tach native market offers. One adapter buys you access to the whole catalog.

✓ ADAPTER MAKES SENSE

Scenario 2: You own a Bobcat with 4 Bob-Tach attachments. Considering a SSQA machine.

The math depends. If you're buying a new machine anyway, factor in the resale value of your Bob-Tach attachments — they have a market, especially in Alberta and Ontario. Compare: sell Bob-Tach attachments + buy SSQA machine + buy new SSQA attachments vs keep Bob-Tach machine + adapter. If the attachment cost delta is large, the adapter may be the cheaper short-term move.

⚠ DEPENDS ON ATTACHMENT VALUE

Scenario 3: Running a hydraulic breaker daily through an adapter

Avoid this if possible. The impact loads from breaker work are hard on everything in the attachment chain. If breaker work is a major part of your schedule, either buy a native Bob-Tach breaker or consider whether an SSQA machine is the better long-term platform.

✗ DON'T RELY ON ADAPTER FOR BREAKER WORK

Scenario 4: Ontario construction site, Bobcat T595, regulated worksite

Use certified attachments in certified configurations. If WorkSafeBC or Ontario MOL audits your site, "the adapter plate works fine" is not documentation. Get your supervisor's sign-off on any adapter use and make sure the adapter's rated capacity covers the attachment. Some construction companies have blanket policies against adapter plates.

⚠ CHECK SITE POLICY FIRST

Scenario 5: Farm use, moving bales and dirt, low-intensity cycle count

A mid-quality adapter plate used consistently and inspected regularly is fine for this use case. You're not running the equipment at commercial cycle counts and the consequences of an attachment fault are lower than on a busy construction site. Get a decent adapter, not the cheapest one, and inspect it before every work session.

✓ ADAPTER WORKS FINE HERE

The Bigger Question: Buy Bobcat or Go SSQA-Native?

Bobcat is genuinely a strong machine. Dealer network in Canada is dense. Resale value is solid. The T595 and T650 are workhorse CTLs that show up on job sites across the country because they perform and hold up. The Bob-Tach attachment ecosystem isn't broken — it just costs more to play in.

But if you're buying a first machine and have no existing attachment collection, the attachment ecosystem question is worth taking seriously. An equivalent Kubota SVL75-3, New Holland C232, or Case TV450 uses universal SSQA from day one. Every attachment from every supplier at every price point mounts without a conversion plate. Over a fleet lifetime, that attachment flexibility and price access has real value.

The one exception: if you're in a region where Bobcat dealer service is significantly better than the alternatives — northern Alberta, some Manitoba markets — the service network advantage may outweigh the attachment ecosystem premium. A machine that gets repaired fast is worth more than a machine with open attachment compatibility that sits waiting for a part.

Summary: Bob-Tach Compatibility in Plain Language

Current full-size Bobcats: Functionally compatible with SSQA attachments in most cases, but not certified by Bobcat. Works. Just know what you're doing.

Small/older Bobcats: Different plate dimensions. Don't assume — verify before ordering any attachment.

Adapter plates: Solve the problem for most use cases. Buy quality, not the cheapest. Inspect every session. Understand the weight penalty and the certification gap.

Native Bob-Tach brands: Bobcat OEM, HLA (some products), Paladin/TMG (some configurations). Limited selection compared to SSQA market.

Used attachment buying on Kijiji: Active market in prairie provinces and Ontario. Always confirm the plate format and machine compatibility before buying.

Browse Skid Steer Attachments in the Catalog

Looking for specific models available in Canada? Browse the skid steer attachment catalog for verified product pages on real models sold through Canadian dealers.