Apercu du guide
Many buyers start by comparing payload and miss the more commercial question: does the route reward tracked control or wheeled portability? In real delivery work, that choice affects landing handling, van loading speed, operator fatigue, and how confident the team feels on mixed daily stops.
Tracked machines often suit heavier or less forgiving stair routes where steadier contact matters. Wheeled or lighter-handling routes often suit teams that need faster loading rhythm, easier repositioning, and cleaner movement between repeated urban drops.
Points cles de comparaison
- Start with route geometry: stair width, landing depth, entrance turns, and how often the machine must be loaded in and out of a van during the day.
- Compare route rhythm as well as climbing feel: tracked control can help on heavier or awkward loads, while wheeled portability can reward tighter city rounds and quicker reset between stops.
- Use pre-order support when the route mixes apartment work, appliance delivery, and bulky handover pressure so the buyer does not over-buy or under-buy the machine class.