Inventory sitting instead of moving
When a unit sells at one location but the right machine is at another, slow freight coordination ties up inventory that should already be in motion. Dealer groups lose deals while equipment waits for a truck.
Tractors, combines, implements, and oversized machinery don’t move on standard freight schedules. McCabe coordinates flatbed and heavy haul coverage that keeps inventory moving — between locations, production to dealer, and across distribution networks.
From a single machine to recurring dealer network transfers. One contact, nationwide.
When freight isn't coordinated around your distribution, inventory stalls, demand windows get missed, and dealers wait on equipment they've already sold.
When a unit sells at one location but the right machine is at another, slow freight coordination ties up inventory that should already be in motion. Dealer groups lose deals while equipment waits for a truck.
Equipment demand doesn't distribute evenly across the year. When volume concentrates — around product launches, seasonal cycles, or regional rollouts — carriers who aren't planning ahead can't cover it. Dealers end up short and customers wait.
Large combines, wide-deck machinery, and heavy implements don't fit a standard van. Most carriers lack the equipment or experience to handle it correctly. When they try anyway, problems follow.
When equipment needs to stage before dealer delivery or hold at a distribution point, managing a separate warehousing vendor alongside a carrier creates gaps. Equipment stalls between steps and no one owns the delay.
Pushing new inventory through a dealer network requires coordinated freight — not ad hoc bookings. Without a logistics partner managing distribution, rollouts stretch out and dealers wait longer than they should.
Dealer transfers coordinated.
Lanes planned around your distribution schedule.
Staging and warehousing under one roof.
From manufacturer to regional distributor to dealer lot to end customer — we handle equipment freight at every stage. Not just the straightforward loads.
Agricultural equipment logistics isn't a single move. It's manufacturer-to-dealer shipments, dealer network inventory transfers, regional distribution, and outbound coordination — often across multiple states and on compressed timelines.
We build freight capacity around your distribution schedule in advance. If you know volume concentrates in a particular window, we're planning capacity ahead of it — not scrambling on the spot market when orders come in.
Move equipment between dealer locations without tying up internal resources. Support inventory balancing across your network as demand shifts — tractors, attachments, and machinery moved to where they'll actually sell.
Coordinated freight from production facilities or regional distribution centers to dealer locations — on a schedule that supports your rollout timeline, not a carrier's convenience window.
For manufacturers and distributors pushing inventory through a dealer network, we handle the freight coordination across lanes and locations — one partner managing the distribution leg, not a patchwork of carriers.
Pre-planting and pre-harvest demand windows require advance freight planning. We establish lane capacity before the surge so dealers aren't scrambling for trucks when orders come in simultaneously.
When equipment arrives before a dealer is ready, or needs to hold at a distribution point, our Claysburg and Sewickley facilities provide staging capacity that keeps the supply chain moving.
Every service below is matched to the type of freight agricultural equipment dealers, manufacturers, and distributors actually move.
The primary mode for most agricultural equipment. Tractors, planters, tillage equipment, and wide implements move on flatbed or step deck — not in a van. We coordinate the right equipment for the load dimensions and weight, not the most convenient option available.
Combines, large headers, irrigation pivots, and specialty equipment often exceed standard trailer dimensions. We coordinate heavy haul solutions for loads that can't move standard — including equipment selection and routing for oversized freight.
Dedicated truckload for single-machine moves or multi-unit shipments. Partial loads for smaller equipment, attachments, and implements that don't require a full trailer — coordinated efficiently without paying for unused capacity.
When equipment needs to hold before dealer delivery, or when a distribution center needs to stage inventory for regional rollout, our Claysburg and Sewickley facilities provide the warehousing and outbound coordination to keep the supply chain moving.
Most carriers book loads reactively. We build capacity around your recurring inventory transfer lanes and demand windows in advance — so when equipment needs to move, freight is already arranged.
We run company trucks when it's most efficient and broker when it provides better coverage or speed. You get one rate, one call, one accountable partner — regardless of which truck shows up.
Dealer locations vary significantly — urban lots, suburban distribution centers, and sites well off major freight corridors. We've operated Pennsylvania and regional routes since 1986 and have the network reach to cover your dealer footprint.
Staging, distribution, and outbound coordination all managed from our Pennsylvania facilities. You don't manage a separate warehouse vendor and carrier — it's one call for both legs.
Agricultural equipment dealer networks span a wide range of locations — from large regional lots to smaller dealerships well off major freight corridors. Standard carriers prioritize high-volume lanes and deprioritize the rest.
McCabe has operated Pennsylvania and regional freight routes since 1986. We have the carrier network to cover dealer locations, distribution centers, and delivery sites across the Northeast, Midwest, and beyond — including locations that standard load boards pass over.
If you're unsure whether we cover a specific route or dealer location, call us directly. We'll confirm coverage before you invest time in a quote.
Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Maryland, Virginia, and surrounding states
Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and beyond via our brokered carrier network
Inventory transfer lanes between dealer locations and regional distribution hubs
Regional carrier network coverage for longer-haul equipment distribution lanes
We move equipment between our dealer locations several times a month. McCabe has the lanes set up and handles the coordination — I'm not calling around to find a flatbed every time inventory needs to shift.
We had a combine that needed to move to a customer two states away — oversized, tight timeline. McCabe handled the equipment selection and routing and kept me informed through the whole move. No surprises.
Spring season doubles our outbound equipment volume. McCabe plans the freight capacity well ahead of time so we're not scrambling for trucks when orders come in. That kind of advance coordination is hard to find.