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Side-by-side comparison · mining

CAT 349 vs Hyundai R480

49t CAT vs 48t Hyundai — full spec showdown, application fit, and our recommendation by project type.

49t / 48t
Operating weight
397 / 280 hp
Engine power
1 / 1
Configurations
3 / 3
Applications
Visual comparison

Side-by-side spec bars

Operating weight
34949t
R48048t
Engine power
349397 hp
R480280 hp
Max dig depth
3498.20 m
R4808.00 m
Max reach
34912.10 m
R48011.80 m
Bucket capacity
3492.80 m³
R4802.00 m³

Overview

The CAT 349 and Hyundai R480 sit in the same mining class, separated by 1.0 tonnes of operating weight. They sit in different brand tiers (Caterpillar in premium, Hyundai in korean), which is the single biggest factor in how they'll behave over a 5-year ownership cycle.

Caterpillar 349 buyers across our Caribbean and African service area typically choose it for 49-tonne entry-level mining-class operations. Hyundai R480 buyers, by contrast, tend to prioritise 48t mining-class production. 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.

Hyundai positioning

Hyundai delivers Korean engineering with the longest standard warranty in the mid-class (5 years/10,000 hours). Cummins engine pairings give strong African aftermarket parts availability.

What the tier difference means in practice

A premium-tier machine vs a Korean-tier machine typically differs across four dimensions over a 5-year ownership cycle: upfront capex (premium ~25-40% higher than value), fuel efficiency (premium ~5-10% better), parts availability (premium consistently 1-3 weeks faster on major components), and resale-value retention at year five (premium ~15-25 percentage points higher). On total cost of ownership the gap is typically much smaller than the upfront spread suggests — but cash-flow profiles differ significantly.

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 349 typically delivers a total 5-year operating cost of $580-650k including acquisition, fuel, parts, service, financing interest, and resale recovery. The Hyundai R480 comes in at $510-580k.

Acquisition (financed): Caterpillar 349 ~$160-220k, Hyundai R480 ~$130-175k. That premium gap of 25-40% on day one is the largest single line item driving short-term cash-flow differences.

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 349. Korean-tier parts run ~$10-14k/year for the Hyundai R480.

Resale at year 5: Caterpillar typically holds 45-55% of acquisition price after 5 years. Hyundai holds 32-42%. 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 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.

Hyundai parts logistics for Hyundai R480

Hyundai Construction Equipment Africa dealer network with Cummins parts ubiquity helping fast-moving items. Parts typically 3-7 days; major components 2-4 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 349 configurations available

  • 349 (standard) — Standard production configuration

Hyundai R480 configurations available

  • R480 (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.

Specs

Side-by-side spec table

FeatureCAT 349Hyundai R480
Operating weight49 tonnes48 tonnes
Engine powerCat C13 — 397 hpHyundai D6AC — 280 hp
Bucket capacity2.80 m³2.00 m³
Max dig depth8.20 m8.00 m
Max reach12.10 m11.80 m
Weight classminingmining
Configurations1 variant1 variant
Which to choose

Recommendation by project profile

Applications

Where each model excels

CAT 349 applications
  • Open-pit mining
  • Heavy quarry primary loading
  • Mining feeder
Hyundai R480 applications
  • Mining-class excavation
  • Bauxite operations
  • Quarry primary
Availability

Both models available across our service area

Frequently asked

Buyer questions

Which is better — CAT 349 or Hyundai R480?

Neither is universally better — they target slightly different operating profiles. The CAT 349 is best for 49-tonne entry-level mining-class operations. The Hyundai R480 is best for 48t mining-class production. Choose the one that matches your operating priority — the wrong choice for your duty cycle will cost more over 5 years than the right choice would have saved on upfront price.

What's the price difference between the CAT 349 and Hyundai R480?

Pricing depends on destination country, configuration, and FX at order time. Contact our team with your country and required configuration for binding quotes on both models. Typically the CAT 349 commands a ~25-40% premium over the Hyundai R480 on day one.

How long does delivery of either to Caribbean and Africa take?

Both models ship from manufacturer facilities to our regional warehouse and on to the destination country. Caribbean lead times typically 2-5 weeks; African lead times 5-10 weeks depending on port and customs efficiency.

Do you offer financing for the CAT 349 and Hyundai R480?

Yes. Both Caterpillar and Hyundai machines can be financed via manufacturer-backed credit programmes (where applicable), regional commercial bank facilities, or lease-to-own structures. Typical terms are 24-60 months. Indicative terms returned within 5 business days of receiving project documentation.

Which holds better resale value — CAT 349 or Hyundai R480?

CAT 349 typically holds significantly better resale value at year 5 — premium-tier machines retain ~45-55% of acquisition price vs ~25-35% for value-tier alternatives. This resale gap is usually the largest single TCO swing factor over 5 years.

What configurations should I specify for CAT 349 or Hyundai R480 in mining operations?

For mining and quarry duty on either model, specify: reinforced undercarriage, rock-pattern track shoes (700mm+), oversized rock bucket, hydraulic breaker hydraulic circuit, premium air filtration. Order at point of sale — retrofitting these costs 30-50% more.

Are parts readily available for the CAT 349 and Hyundai R480 across Africa?

Yes — both brands have meaningful African dealer presence. CAT fast-moving parts typically 24-72 hours; Hyundai fast-moving parts 5-10 days. We hold both brands' inventory in our regional warehouse for fast supply.

Can I get an operator trained on the CAT 349 or Hyundai R480?

Yes. Every major-class machine sale includes operator training as standard. Manufacturer-certified training is also available through Caterpillar and Hyundai dealer networks in most major Caribbean and African markets.

Continue comparing

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Cite this page
APA
Suriname Excavators. (2026). CAT 349 vs Hyundai R480 — Comparison. Retrieved 10 June 2026, from https://surinameexcavators.com/compare/cat-349-vs-hyundai-r480
MLA
"CAT 349 vs Hyundai R480 — Comparison." Suriname Excavators, 10 June 2026, https://surinameexcavators.com/compare/cat-349-vs-hyundai-r480.
Chicago
Suriname Excavators. "CAT 349 vs Hyundai R480 — Comparison." Accessed 10 June 2026. https://surinameexcavators.com/compare/cat-349-vs-hyundai-r480.
BibTeX
@misc{surinameexcavators__compare_cat_349_vs_hyundai_r480,
  title = {CAT 349 vs Hyundai R480 — Comparison},
  author = {Suriname Excavators},
  year = {2026},
  url = {https://surinameexcavators.com/compare/cat-349-vs-hyundai-r480},
  note = {Accessed: 10 June 2026}
}
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