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Terex Reach Stacker | Parts

This is a focused, professional review of , aimed at fleet managers, procurement specialists, and heavy equipment technicians. Executive Summary Terex reach stackers (notably the Fuchs and Terex Fuchs lines, as well as former FANTUZZI and CESAB legacy models) are workhorses in intermodal yards, steel service centers, and heavy logistics. The availability, quality, and pricing of their parts are mixed —excellent for common wear items, but increasingly problematic for older or low-volume electro-hydraulic components.

– Reliable for routine maintenance, risky for obsolete or proprietary electronics. 1. Parts Categorization & Availability | Category | Examples | Terex OEM Availability | Aftermarket Quality | Lead Time | |----------|----------|------------------------|--------------------|------------| | Wear parts | Brake pads, hydraulic hoses, filters, tires | Good (stocked globally) | Excellent (e.g., Donaldson, Haldex) | 1–3 days | | Structural | Boom sections, chassis frames, outriggers | Poor (long lead, high cost) | Very limited; require fabrication | 4–12 weeks | | Powertrain | Engines (Deutz, Cummins), transmissions (ZF, Dana) | Discontinued for older models | Good via engine/transmission specialists | 3–10 days | | Hydraulic | Pumps, cylinders, valves, rotary unions | Moderate (common valves available) | Good (Rexroth, Parker cross-references) | 1–4 weeks | | Electronics | ECUs, joystick controllers, CAN displays | Very poor (often obsolete) | Almost none – salvage only | Months or NLA | terex reach stacker parts