Up to 350 lbs
Up to 6,000 lbs
Up to 16,000 lbs
Up to 40,000 lbs
High-capacity loads
Shock absorbing
Corrosion resistant
Outdoor / rough terrain
OEM replacements
All measurements indicate the wheel diameter by the tread width.
The below capacity ranges indicate the working (dynamic) load that each caster will support. A safety factor should be included in your formula to determine your required load rating per caster.
W/(C-1)=R W is total weight needed to move. C is total number of casters required. R is ideal load rating, with safety factor built in. Divide the total load weight by one less caster than you will use to safely determine load rating.
Plate dimensions shown are overall mounting plate size.
When replacing existing casters, select the closest plate size and verify bolt-hole compatibility.
BHP = Bolt Hole Pattern, shown under each plate.
Heavy track casters carry up to 18,000 lb per wheel on a guided rail — the extreme end of fixed-path mobility. When a transfer line moves loads this heavy and they must follow an exact path every cycle, flanged and grooved track wheels on engineered rail are the only answer.
















































At 18,000 lb per wheel, free-roaming swivel casters are a liability — the cart is too heavy to correct by hand if it drifts, and a collision at that mass is a serious event. Track casters remove the variable: the rail constrains the cart, every cycle, regardless of load. Flanged wheels for the heaviest builds, heavy V-groove where angle rail is in place.
Heavy track casters need engineered rail — properly anchored, properly sized steel — and the floor under the rail has to carry the point load. This is an engineered installation: the rail spec, the anchoring, and the floor design are part of the project, not an afterthought. Powered movement (tugger or tow vehicle) is assumed.
Capacity — heavy track casters reach 18,000 lb per wheel. The guidance principle is the same; the construction and rail are heavier.
Yes — at 18,000 lb per wheel the rail, anchoring, and floor are an engineered installation, not bolt-on hardware.
Flanged is common at the extreme end — the lip over the rail edge is positive retention. Heavy V-groove works where precise angle rail exists.
Our US-based caster engineers will match the right build to your load, floor, and application.
Call 844-439-4335

