Operating Guide • Canada

Skid Steer Operating Tips — Controls, Efficiency, Safety, and Canadian Winter Starting

Most people learn to operate a skid steer by trial and error over the first 20–30 hours. These tips compress that learning curve: the control patterns you need to know, the bucket technique that actually fills efficiently, the slope mistakes that get machines rolled, and how to start a diesel skid steer at -20°C without destroying the engine.

On This Page

  1. Controls Overview: ISO vs H-Pattern
  2. Efficient Bucket Loading
  3. Common Beginner Mistakes
  4. Working on Slopes
  5. Blind Spots and Spotter Use
  6. Attachment Engagement Safety
  7. Cold Start in Canadian Winters
  8. Daily Inspection Checklist
  9. Hour Tracking and Maintenance Intervals

Controls Overview: ISO vs H-Pattern

Every new skid steer operator has this question when they first sit down. Modern skid steers — especially those with joystick controls — use one of two patterns: ISO or H-pattern (also called SAE). Older machines with hand levers or foot controls use variations that don't map neatly to either. Here's what each means:

ISO Pattern (Single-Joystick)

Two joysticks. Left joystick controls machine travel (push forward to go forward, push back to reverse; push left or right to turn). Right joystick controls the attachment: forward/back raises and lowers the boom; left/right tilts the bucket. This is the modern default on most new machines — Bobcat calls it their "Advanced Hand/Foot Controls" (AHF), John Deere calls it EH controls. Faster to learn for new operators who haven't built H-pattern muscle memory.

H-Pattern (Two-Lever)

Two hand levers, each controlling one side's drive. Push both forward — machine goes forward. Pull both back — reverse. Push left lever forward while right stays neutral — machine pivots right. Foot pedals or a secondary hand lever controls the attachment (bucket curl and lift). Operators with excavator or older skid steer experience often prefer H-pattern for the direct mechanical feel. New operators frequently find it confusing at first — the relationship between lever and machine movement takes time to internalize.

Most modern machines can be switched between patterns via a software setting (consult the operator manual — it's usually a menu item in the instrument cluster). Some older Bobcat models with mechanical controls are H-pattern only; you can't software-switch a mechanical system. If you're renting and unsure which pattern a machine is set to, ask the rental yard before you start. Running in the wrong pattern is how new operators accidentally hit things in the first hour.

Which should you learn? If you're starting fresh with no prior experience, ISO is generally easier to pick up in the first few hours. H-pattern offers more direct feel for experienced operators moving a lot of material. If you'll operate multiple brands and ages of equipment over time, learning both is worth the investment — they're not that different once you have 50 hours on each.

Efficient Bucket Loading: Crowd, Lift, Curl

The most common beginner inefficiency is treating the bucket like a shovel — driving forward at a pile, getting stuck, backing up, trying again. Efficient bucket loading is a 3-step sequence that works with the machine's geometry instead of against it:

  1. Crowd: Approach the pile with the bucket level and low (6–12 inches off the ground). Drive forward into the pile at low speed — let the machine's forward momentum push the cutting edge into the material. This is the "crowd" — you're packing material into the bucket.
  2. Lift: Once the bucket is packed or the machine begins to lose forward traction, start lifting the boom while maintaining forward pressure. The lifting action shifts weight to the rear and helps the bucket break free from the pile.
  3. Curl: As the boom lifts to carry height (typically 12–18 inches off ground for travel), curl the bucket back to secure the load. A fully curled bucket won't spill material when you travel or hit bumps.

The specific timing of lift vs curl is material-dependent. Loose gravel: crowd hard, then lift and curl simultaneously. Clay or compacted material: crowd until the machine stalls, then lift while continuing to press forward. Loose mulch: light crowd, quick lift and curl to avoid burying the machine.

Carry height for travel: Travel with the bucket 12–18 inches off the ground, not at maximum height. High carry position raises the machine's centre of gravity significantly, making it unstable on uneven terrain. Low carry position gives you better visibility over the bucket and keeps the weight distributed properly.

Common Beginner Mistakes

Overcrowding the Bucket

Trying to take a heaping, overloaded bucket on every pass is slower, not faster. An overfull bucket spills material as you travel, meaning you're constantly cleaning up behind yourself. A properly loaded bucket — 90% full and curled back — moves more total material in a day than an overloaded one that spills half of it. Also: an overloaded bucket changes the machine's balance. Watch your rated operating capacity (ROC) — it's the maximum safe load with the bucket at carry height, and exceeding it puts the front of the machine down while lifting the rear.

Dumping Too High

Beginners dump loads at maximum boom height — it feels like it gives the most clearance into a trailer or dump truck. In practice, most skid steers need the boom at or near maximum reach to get over a truck bed. The problem: at maximum height, you have less boom control, the load dumps harder (more impact), and the machine is at peak instability. Learn the specific height needed for your dump point and stop lifting there — don't drive the boom into full extension every time.

Wrong Tipping Load Margin

The ROC printed on your machine (Rated Operating Capacity) is 50% of the static tipping load — meaning the machine tips over at twice the ROC with the load extended forward. That sounds like a huge safety margin, but it assumes flat, solid ground. On a slope, on soft soil, or while turning with a load, the effective tipping margin drops significantly. A load that felt fine on flat concrete will put the machine over on a 10-degree grade. Learn to feel the rear of the machine — when it starts to feel light, you're at the edge of stability.

Spinning Tracks on Hard Surfaces

Wheeled skid steers on pavement: the pivot-turn motion (one side forward, one side reverse) causes tires to scrub sideways on the surface. This tears up pavement, damages lawns, and destroys your tire tread over time. On sensitive surfaces, make wider-radius turns or use a "K-turn" (three-point turn) instead of a zero-radius spin. On CTLs, spinning tracks on bare rock or concrete wears track pads much faster than operating on soil.

Forgetting to Set Boom Lock

When you exit the machine for any reason — to move a rock by hand, open a gate, inspect something — the boom must be lowered to the ground and the boom lock engaged (if equipped). A skid steer with the boom up, engine running, and no operator in the seat is a serious hazard. Most modern machines have a seat bar interlock that prevents boom movement when the bar is up, but that doesn't protect against the operator standing outside with the bar down.

Working on Slopes

This is where skid steer accidents happen. The machine's short wheelbase and high centre of gravity (especially with a loaded bucket at height) make it far more tip-prone than it looks.

Traversing vs Straight Up and Down

The rule: on slopes steeper than 10 degrees, go straight up or straight down. Never traverse (drive sideways across) a steep slope with a skid steer. The combination of the machine's weight, the loaded bucket, and the lateral force of the slope creates a tipping moment that can overturn the machine in seconds. Most skid steer rollovers happen on slopes that operators thought were "not that steep."

When going up a slope: keep the loaded bucket low and angled slightly downhill to keep weight forward. When going down: back down the slope with the heavy end (bucket end) facing downhill — the bucket weight keeps the rear (engine) end from swinging around.

For slopes in the 5–10 degree range that you need to traverse: do it with an empty or nearly empty bucket, travel slowly, and keep the bucket low. If the machine feels like it's pulling to one side, you're at the limit — find a different path.

⚠️ Compact track loaders on slopes: CTLs feel more stable than wheeled machines on slopes because the tracks grip better. They are NOT safer on steep traverses — the ground grip actually means the machine may not slip before it tips. Don't let the track grip give you false confidence on side slopes.

Blind Spots and Spotter Use

The skid steer has significant blind spots, particularly:

Use a spotter for any situation where you're working near people, tight structures, or obstacles you can't see. The spotter stands at a position where they can see both you and the hazard — never directly behind the machine, never in the swing path of the bucket. Establish a hand signal system before starting, and agree on a "stop immediately" signal.

Attachment Engagement Safety

Quick attach systems are convenient and mostly reliable — but "mostly" is the operative word. The most common attachment accident is incomplete engagement: the attachment appears locked but isn't fully seated, and releases under load. Follow this sequence every time:

  1. Drive the attachment plate into the attachment until it's fully seated — you should feel and hear it seat fully.
  2. Engage the locking mechanism (lever, pins, or hydraulic lock depending on your system) fully.
  3. Test before you move: Lift the attachment slightly off the ground. Tilt it forward. If it's going to release, it will do it here with the attachment 2 inches up, not 10 feet up over someone's truck.
  4. For hydraulic-powered attachments: connect aux couplers fully and route hoses so they won't catch on the attachment during operation.
Bob-Tach vs universal ISO: Bobcat's Bob-Tach uses a wedge-and-pin system operated by a lever inside the cab. Universal skid steer (ISO) quick attach uses two pins that can be released from outside the machine. Both systems are reliable when used correctly and dangerous when used half-heartedly. Never assume an attachment is locked — physically verify.

Cold Start in Canadian Winters (-20°C)

Starting a diesel skid steer in serious Canadian cold requires patience and the right sequence. Rushing it — or using starting fluid when you shouldn't — leads to damaged glow plugs, cracked injectors, and blown engine seals.

The Correct Cold-Start Sequence

  1. Block heater first: If it's below -15°C and the machine was parked overnight, you want the block heater to have been plugged in for at least 4–6 hours. This is the single most effective thing you can do for cold starting. A warm block means warm oil, which means the engine turns over faster and fires on fewer glow plug cycles.
  2. Turn to "run" position, wait for glow plugs: Don't go straight to start. Turn the key to the run position, watch the glow plug indicator light (usually a coil symbol on the dash). Wait for it to extinguish — this tells you the glow plugs have completed their pre-heat cycle. At -20°C this can take 20–30 seconds. At -30°C, two cycles may be needed on older machines.
  3. Throttle at low idle: Start with the throttle at low or mid position. High throttle at cold start puts undue stress on cold engine components and doesn't actually help the engine fire.
  4. Crank for 10–15 seconds maximum, then wait: If it doesn't fire in 10–15 seconds, stop cranking and wait 30–60 seconds before trying again. Continuous cranking drains the battery, overheats the starter motor, and introduces unburned fuel into the cylinders.
  5. Let it warm up before loading: Once running, let the machine idle at low RPM for 5–10 minutes minimum at -20°C. The hydraulic oil is thick at cold temperatures — operating under load before it warms up strains the hydraulic pump and circuits. The hydraulic system is warm enough for light work when the oil reaches roughly 40°C — most machines with a temp gauge will show this, or you can use a 10-minute idle as the rule of thumb.
Winter hydraulic tip: Cold hydraulic oil is genuinely thick — it's like molasses at -20°C. After startup, cycle the boom up and down 3–4 times slowly before putting the machine to work. This circulates warm oil through the system faster than idling alone. The arms will move sluggishly at first; that's normal. If they don't move at all, the oil is still too cold — idle longer.
⚠️ Ether/starting fluid: Using ether (starting fluid) on a diesel skid steer that has glow plugs is a quick way to blow a head gasket. Glow plugs pre-heat the combustion chamber so diesel can fire — adding ether creates a premature, violent ignition event before the pistons are in the right position. Ether is for very old naturally-aspirated diesels without glow plugs. If your skid steer has glow plugs (most built after 1990 do), skip the ether entirely.

Daily Inspection Checklist

Pre-Operation Daily Check

A 10-minute walkaround before every shift catches problems before they become expensive failures. In Canada, this is especially important after winter nights and spring thaw when temperature swings stress hoses and seals.

Fluids

Engine and Drivetrain

Undercarriage and Structure

Cab and Controls

Hour Tracking and Maintenance Intervals

The hour meter on a skid steer is the maintenance clock. Most manufacturers specify service intervals in hours, not calendar time, because a machine working 12 hours a day reaches service intervals much faster than one working 2 hours a day. The general intervals (verify with your specific model's manual):

Interval Typical Tasks
Every 10 hours (or daily) Check all fluid levels, inspect air filter indicator, grease all fittings (some machines have daily-grease points), inspect tracks/tires
50 hours Grease all zerks on lift arms and boom pins, inspect and clean radiator fins, check battery terminals
250 hours Engine oil and filter change (or sooner in very dusty or cold conditions), fuel filter change, hydraulic filter change
500 hours Drive belt inspection and replacement as needed, hydraulic fluid analysis, track tension and pad inspection
1,000–2,000 hours Full hydraulic fluid change, chain case oil, final drive service, injector inspection

If you're buying a used machine, the hour meter reading is the first number to look at — but it's not the only one. A 3,000-hour machine that was maintained by someone who followed the service intervals above is typically in better shape than a 1,500-hour machine that never had oil changed on schedule. Ask for service records. Look at the colour of the hydraulic fluid. Pull the engine oil dipstick and check what's on it.

Cold-climate grease tip: Standard grease thickens and becomes nearly immovable at -25°C. If you're operating a skid steer in northern Canada or during hard Alberta and Saskatchewan winters, switch to a low-temperature grease (rated to -40°C) for all pivot points. Running standard grease at extreme cold doesn't just reduce lubrication — it can actually damage the seals as cold grease is forced through them on startup.

Browse the Skid Steer Attachment Catalog

Operating safely starts with knowing your equipment. Browse the skid steer attachment catalog for verified product specs on real models sold through Canadian dealers.