Products -> Skid steer Rentals & Track Loaders Rentals
The Kubota SSV75 skid steer delivers 74.3 horsepower and a rated operating capacity pushing 2,700 lbs — enough machine to move serious material volume, run demanding hydraulic attachments, and push through the kind of site conditions that light-duty skid steers work around rather than through. NorthPoint Equipment Rentals stocks the SSV75 across all five New Hampshire locations, and it's a frequent first call from contractors across the Lakes Region and I-93 corridor who need a skid steer with real production output rather than one that's just technically in the category.
74.3 Horsepower Output The SSV75's diesel engine produces 74.3 horsepower — enough to push through compacted fill, move heavy material loads, and run hydraulic attachments at working output rather than reduced flow. At this horsepower level in the skid steer class, the machine stops being a limitation on the job and starts being the factor that determines how fast the work gets done.
2,690 lb Rated Operating Capacity A rated operating capacity of approximately 2,690 lbs means the SSV75 lifts and moves full bucket loads of gravel, topsoil, concrete rubble, and dense fill material without approaching the machine's stability limit on every pass. Working within a machine's rated capacity rather than at its edge is what separates productive skid steer operation from the slow, careful movement that an undersized machine forces on heavy material.
Enclosed Pressurized Cab The SSV75's enclosed cab is pressurized and climate controlled — heat and air conditioning — with a design that keeps dust, debris, and fumes out of the operator environment rather than just keeping weather off the seat. A pressurized cab on a skid steer matters specifically on demolition, land clearing, and site grading jobs in New Hampshire where dust and debris generation is part of the work rather than an incidental condition.
High-Flow Hydraulics Available The SSV75 is available with high-flow hydraulic output, which unlocks the full performance range of demanding attachments — cold planers, mulchers, high-flow augers, and sweepers — that standard-flow skid steers can't run at rated output. High-flow availability at this machine size means the SSV75 isn't just a material mover — it's a capable attachment platform for the full range of work that comes up on New Hampshire commercial and municipal job sites.
Vertical Lift Path The SSV75 runs a vertical lift path rather than a radial lift geometry, which keeps the bucket in a more consistent forward position through the lift arc and maximizes dump reach at full height. On loading trucks, filling dumpsters, and working over walls or berms, vertical lift geometry produces better results than radial lift at the same rated capacity — the load stays in front of the machine where it's useful rather than swinging back as the boom rises.
Kubota Reliability in the Field Kubota's SSV75 is built on the same engineering philosophy that runs through their excavator and utility equipment line — straightforward maintenance access, durable hydraulic components, and a machine that holds its performance through hard use rather than drifting as the hours accumulate. For a multi-day or multi-week commercial rental, a machine that performs consistently from day one through the end of the job is worth more than peak specs that don't hold up under sustained use.
The skid steer is one of the most versatile machines on a job site — and one of the most mismatched to the work when the wrong size gets ordered. An undersized skid steer on a production grading or loading job slows every cycle, strains against material weights it wasn't built to move efficiently, and runs hydraulic attachments at reduced output that compromises the tool's performance. The Kubota SSV75 is the answer to that problem for the range of work that comes up on New Hampshire residential and commercial job sites — 74.3 horsepower, approximately 2,690 lbs of rated operating capacity, and hydraulics tuned for both standard and high-flow attachment work. It's a machine built to move material at a pace that makes the job go faster rather than one that makes the job possible while keeping the operator focused on not overloading it.
Kubota built the SSV75 around a diesel engine and hydraulic system that reflect the machine's position in the mid-size skid steer class — not underpowered for the frame, not tuned for spec numbers that drop under sustained load. The vertical lift path keeps the bucket in a productive position through the full lift arc, which matters on truck loading, dumpster filling, and any job where the material needs to go up and over something before it goes where it's supposed to go. The enclosed, pressurized cab is a meaningful feature on New Hampshire job sites specifically — demolition work, land clearing, and site grading in this region generate dust and debris that an unpressurized cab accumulates through a full shift in a way that's both uncomfortable and a long-term health consideration for operators running production hours. The pressurized cab keeps that environment outside where it belongs while the operator works in a climate-controlled space with heat and air conditioning that performs across the full New Hampshire working season.
The SSV75's hydraulic system supports both standard and high-flow configurations depending on the attachment requirements — a versatility that expands the machine's useful range from basic bucket work through demanding attachment applications without needing a separate, larger machine for the high-flow jobs. Cold planers for asphalt milling, forestry mulchers for land clearing, high-flow augers for larger diameter boring, and industrial sweepers all require hydraulic output that standard-flow skid steers can't deliver at rated performance. The SSV75 with high-flow covers that range. The universal skid steer attachment interface is an additional practical advantage — the SSV75 runs the broad range of standard skid steer attachments available across the industry, not just a proprietary selection, which gives renters flexibility to pair the machine with specialty attachments they may already own or source separately for a specific job phase.
Contractors and municipalities renting the SSV75 at our New Hampshire locations are running jobs where production output matters: commercial site prep and grading where the material volume and schedule require a machine that moves efficiently rather than carefully, loading and material handling on construction sites where the skid steer is the primary material mover across a full workday, land clearing and brush management on sites where the mulcher or grapple attachment runs for hours rather than minutes, and road and utility work where the machine handles backfill, compaction setup, and material distribution across a long run. Municipalities across the Lakes Region and North Country use the SSV75 for everything from parking lot sweeping with a sweeper attachment to road shoulder material work to facility maintenance that requires a versatile machine across multiple task types in a single mobilization. Our counter staff sees the SSV75 come up consistently on mid-size commercial projects where a contractor has learned that the light-duty skid steer they rented last time wasn't the right call for the material conditions on a New Hampshire job site.
Central and northern New Hampshire's commercial job sites tend to involve the kind of material conditions that expose the gap between a machine's rated capacity and its actual comfortable working range — compacted glacial till, dense gravel subbase, and mixed demolition material that weighs more per bucket load than clean topsoil or light fill. The SSV75 handles that material range without the operator managing the load on every cycle, which is what productive skid steer operation actually looks like versus a machine that's technically capable but practically slow on heavy material. For general skid steer, track loader, and attachment rental across New Hampshire, the SSV75 is the answer when the job needs a mid-size skid steer with real production output and the hydraulic range to run demanding attachments effectively.
On jobs that combine skid steer work with excavation — site prep that moves from rough grading into foundation or utility work — the SSV75 pairs naturally with machines from our excavator and backhoe rental fleet on the same mobilization. The skid steer handles material distribution, backfill spreading, and loading while the excavator handles the dig — a combination that comes up constantly on commercial site work and runs efficiently when both machines are sourced from the same yard without coordination across multiple rental companies. For jobs involving compaction after grading and backfill, equipment from our compaction and asphalt lineup completes the cycle on the same rental date.
Before pickup, confirm whether your job requires standard or high-flow hydraulics — the answer determines which attachment configurations are available and affects the rental setup, so it's the right conversation to have at booking rather than at the job site. The SSV75 transports on a standard equipment trailer or lowboy rated for the machine's operating weight — confirm your trailer's capacity before loading. Our best price guarantee applies on the SSV75 across all five locations, and contractors running the machine on extended commercial projects should set up a charge account — multi-week commercial rentals with attachments and delivery are exactly the scenario where organized project billing makes the administrative side of the job straightforward. Not sure if the SSV75 is the right size or whether your job needs a compact track loader instead? Call us — our counter staff will tell you straight what fits the work without pushing more machine than the job requires.
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Weight & Performance | |
| Engine Output | 74.3 HP |
| Rated Operating Capacity | ~2,690 lbs |
| Lift Path | Vertical lift |
| Cab & Controls | |
| Cab Type | Enclosed — pressurized, heat & A/C |
| Hydraulics & Attachments | |
| Hydraulic Options | Standard flow / High-flow available |
| Attachment Interface | Universal skid steer — industry standard |
| Power & Fuel | |
| Fuel Type | Diesel |
| Engine | Kubota diesel |
| Transport | |
| Trailer Requirement | Standard equipment trailer or lowboy — confirm rated capacity |
Confirm standard or high-flow hydraulic requirement at booking — attachment performance depends on the correct hydraulic configuration being set up before the machine leaves the yard. Trailer rated capacity must match the SSV75's operating weight.
Does the SSV75 need high-flow hydraulics for standard bucket and grading work, or is that only for specialty attachments? Standard-flow hydraulics cover bucket work, general grading, and the majority of common skid steer attachment applications — forks, grapples, standard augers, and light sweepers all run on standard flow without performance issues. High-flow is specifically required for attachments with higher hydraulic demand — cold planers, forestry mulchers, high-flow augers, and industrial sweepers that need more hydraulic volume than standard flow delivers to perform at rated output. If you're not sure whether your attachment requires high-flow, tell our counter staff what attachment you're planning to run and they'll confirm the hydraulic requirement before your rental is set up — running a high-flow attachment on standard flow produces reduced output and can cause attachment issues that show up mid-job.
How does the SSV75 compare to a compact track loader — when does the wheeled skid steer make more sense? The SSV75 on wheels makes more sense than a compact track loader when the job is primarily on hard surfaces — concrete, asphalt, compacted gravel — where wheel traction is adequate and rubber tracks don't offer a surface protection advantage. Wheels also maneuver faster on hard surfaces and cause less wear on finished pavement than rubber tracks do over extended use. The compact track loader has the advantage on soft ground, mud, slopes, and any surface where ground pressure and traction are the variables — tracks distribute weight more evenly and maintain traction in conditions that challenge a wheeled machine. If your job splits between hard surface work and soft ground conditions, call us and describe the site — our counter staff will give you a straight read on which machine fits the majority of what you're doing.
What's the realistic load the SSV75 can move per cycle, and how does that translate to daily output? The SSV75's rated operating capacity of approximately 2,690 lbs means a full bucket of dense gravel or compacted fill — material that weighs in the range of 2,000 to 2,500 lbs per yard depending on moisture content and composition — is within the machine's comfortable working range without approaching the stability limit on every pass. Daily output depends entirely on cycle time, haul distance, and material type, but as a practical benchmark on a loading job with a short haul cycle, an experienced operator on the SSV75 moves material at a rate that covers significant volume across a full production day. If your job has a specific volume target on a specific timeline, describe it to our counter staff and they'll tell you straight whether the SSV75 fits the schedule or whether the job needs a larger machine.
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