Overview
The CAT 336 and CAT 349 sit in adjacent weight classes (medium crawler vs mining), separated by 12.2 tonnes of operating weight. Both are positioned in the premium segment, which means the choice between them turns less on brand reputation and more on configuration fit, parts logistics, and operator preference.
Caterpillar 336 buyers across our Caribbean and African service area typically choose it for heavy civil works, quarry primary loading, and mining-feeder operations. Caterpillar 349 buyers, by contrast, tend to prioritise 49-tonne entry-level mining-class operations. The two machines have meaningful overlap on general construction-sector work, so a buyer with that application profile genuinely has a choice to make — and it's worth understanding the trade-offs in depth before committing.
Brand positioning
Caterpillar positioning
Caterpillar is the global benchmark — strongest parts logistics across our Caribbean and African service area, highest resale value retention, and the safest single-machine purchase decision for buyers prioritising uptime over upfront price.
Caterpillar positioning
Caterpillar is the global benchmark — strongest parts logistics across our Caribbean and African service area, highest resale value retention, and the safest single-machine purchase decision for buyers prioritising uptime over upfront price.
5-year total cost of ownership
Across a 5-year ownership cycle at typical African construction-sector use (2,000 operating hours/year, $1.20/L diesel, financed 50%), the CAT 336 typically delivers a total 5-year operating cost of $580-650k including acquisition, fuel, parts, service, financing interest, and resale recovery. The CAT 349 comes in at $580-650k.
Acquisition (financed): Caterpillar 336 ~$160-220k, Caterpillar 349 ~$160-220k. Comparable upfront.
Fuel over 5 years: Both machines burn 20-30 L/h on standard duty. Across 10,000 lifetime operating hours that's $240-360k of diesel. Real-world consumption is close — within 5% variance.
Parts + service: Premium-tier parts run ~$14-18k/year for the CAT 336. Premium-tier parts run ~$14-18k/year for the CAT 349.
Resale at year 5: Caterpillar typically holds 45-55% of acquisition price after 5 years. Caterpillar holds 45-55%. The resale gap is often the largest single TCO swing factor — premium-tier machines effectively rebate 15-25% more capital at year five.
Parts logistics & service support
Caterpillar parts logistics for CAT 336
Tractafric (Ghana, Cameroon), Mantrac (Tanzania, Kenya, Egypt, Nigeria), Bia (West Africa), Empresa Cubana de Maquinaria across the Caribbean — easily the strongest dealer network of any brand. Fast-moving wearing parts typically available within 24-72 hours; major components 1-3 weeks.
Caterpillar parts logistics for CAT 349
Tractafric (Ghana, Cameroon), Mantrac (Tanzania, Kenya, Egypt, Nigeria), Bia (West Africa), Empresa Cubana de Maquinaria across the Caribbean — easily the strongest dealer network of any brand. Fast-moving wearing parts typically available within 24-72 hours; major components 1-3 weeks.
What this means in practice
Mining and infrastructure operations across Caribbean and African markets typically lose $2-5k per hour of unscheduled downtime — meaning a single 24-hour parts delay can cost more than the parts themselves. Choose the brand with the strongest parts logistics in your destination country and operating sector.
Configurations available
CAT 336 configurations available
- 336 (standard) — Standard reach boom — most common configuration
- 336 long-reach — Extended boom/stick for dredging and slope work
- 336 mass excavation — Reinforced for quarry primary loading and mining-feeder duty
CAT 349 configurations available
- 349 (standard) — Standard production configuration
Configuration choice (undercarriage track pattern, bucket capacity, hydraulic-circuit options, cab certification) drives 30%+ of total cost of ownership over a 5-year cycle. Whichever model you choose, specify configuration to the buyer's actual operating profile before order — retrofitting later costs 30-50% more.