Turn Key Units for Sales

Loftness Kwik-Trim

Loftness Attachments
650 South Main Street
Hector, MN 55342
United States

Loftness Kwik-Trim
Engine Type

Description
The Kwik-Trim is more maneuverable and cost effective than large-scale mechanical trimmers. And it’s more productive than using bucket trucks or hand climbing. The Kwik-Trim features a customized mini excavator chassis with a 53-foot boom reach to efficiently handle the vast majority of tree trimming needs, making it the perfect tool for right-of-way vegetation management.

The Takeuchi TB260 power unit platform has been customized for vegetation management with full-view bronze tinted polycarbonate windows that are a half-inch thick. The unit has been ROPS, FOPS and OPS certified to ensure maximum safety, and the non-conducive boom has been certified to ANSI A92-2 Category C. But it’s also comfortable, featuring a climate-controlled cab, fully adjustable seat, AM/FM radio with auxiliary audio jack, and a cupholder.

Zero-Turn Radius. 100-Percent Awesome. Loftness’ Counter-Rotating Track Control System allows you to maintain precise saw position while rotating the track undercarriage. Thanks to this innovative feature, you can confidently and safely position the Kwik-Trim on some of the tightest jobsites.

Unlike large-scale mechanical trimmers, the Kwik-Trim doesn’t require a lowboy trailer and semi truck for transport. Weighing only 14,000 pounds, it can be towed with a pickup and standard trailer. This allows crews to maneuver more easily on tight jobsites, while keeping a lower profile.
Video
Map
Address
Advertiser
Sales Rep
650 South Main Street
Hector MN 55342
United States
In 1956 Loftness Manufacturing, the forerunner of Loftness Specialized Equipment, Inc., had its beginnings in a farm shop owned by Dick Loftness, a Hector, Minnesota, farmer. Dick had made a V-type snowblower for his own use. A few neighbors saw the blower and asked if Dick would make one for them. Soon Dick had made several of the snowblowers, and Loftness Manufacturing was launched.

Gradually, the sales grew until it reached the point where Dick could no longer operate at the farm. He moved the business into a small, vacant building in Hector and employed a few farmers who were not busy in the winter. In 1970, Marv Nelson, a local farmer, began acting as a distributor for Dick. He bought the snowblowers directly from Loftness and traveled the upper Midwest, selling them to farm implement dealers. Gradually, sales increased, and the Loftness Snowblower name was beginning to be recognized. Loftness Manufacturing was once again moved in 1975, this time into a building Dick had built in Hector. The company continued to grow, but by 1979 Dick decided to sell. Marv Nelson bought the business, controlling production as well as distribution. Semi-trucks were purchased, and snowblowers were delivered directly to dealers. Up to this point, snowblowers were the only product manufactured. Sales fluctuated widely, since they were dictated solely by weather. Another product was needed to smooth the peaks and valleys of sales.

Through the years, Loftness added new product lines, including vegetation management equipment, crop shredders, grain bagging equipment and, most recently, fertilizer and lime spreaders. After Marv’s passing, ownership of the company was split between his wife, Gloria, and sons Dave and Steve Nelson. The three continued to grow the company until deciding to transfer ownership of the company to the employees who helped Loftness become such a success. On January 1, 2020, the company joined an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP), officially making Loftness Specialized Equipment 100-percent employee owned.

Today, the legacy built by Dick Loftness and the Nelson family lives on, with each employee taking a personal stake in the quality of their products and success of their customers.

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