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Deere Steps Up X-Tier Push with 844 and 904 Loaders

The 844 and 904 X-Tier wheel loaders target fuel and tyre savings.

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John Deere 904 X-Tier wheel loader operating on a construction site
Deere 904 Xtier Wheel Loader. (Photo: John Deere)

John Deere is pushing its electrified drivetrain technology further into the heavy equipment market with the launch of the 844 X-Tier and 904 X-Tier wheel loaders, extending a strategy built around efficiency gains in high-production loading.

The two machines, operating in the 36–40 tonne class, join Deere’s expanding X-Tier range and place the company’s Electric Variable Transmission (EVT) at the centre of the design. This signals the direction Deere is heading in: fewer mechanical drivetrains and more electronically managed power delivery.

EVT moves into the driver’s seat

The EVT replaces the conventional torque converter and transmission with two electric motors and an inverter that manage torque, ground speed and traction together. This setup is designed to deliver smoother operation, quicker response and improved efficiency in demanding loading cycles compared with Deere’s P-Tier machines.

Across construction and aggregates, this type of electrified drivetrain has been gaining ground as manufacturers look for ways to reduce fuel burn without moving into full battery-electric platforms — still impractical for many heavy-duty applications.

Fuel and tyres under pressure

Fuel use and tyre wear remain two of the biggest cost pressures for quarry operators, contractors and materials producers, and Deere is targeting both directly with this release.

The company claims operators can achieve fuel savings of up to 15% in Standard mode, while Performance mode can lift productivity by as much as 5% in more intensive applications. Deere says the combined effect can reduce total cost of ownership by up to 4% compared with previous models.

READ MORE: Deere Goes All-Electric with New Gator GX Lineup

Tyre wear, in particular, is a major focus. The new Pile Slip Assist system automatically engages the differential lock as the machine approaches a material pile, reducing wheel slip and helping improve bucket fill consistency. Deere says this not only lowers tyre wear but also helps shorten cycle times in production environments.

A tyre pressure monitoring system comes fitted to help operators keep inflation at the right level, helping extend tyre life in day-to-day use.

More power per pass

Deere has also fitted larger high-strength steel buckets, allowing more material to be moved per cycle and cutting down on the number of passes needed over a shift.

Beyond the drivetrain, the company has also added more operator-focused technology. The machines include programmable electrohydraulic controls, additional machine customisation options and optional operator-awareness systems aimed at improving machine control and safety.

Inside the cab, the X-Tier specification sits at the premium end of the range. It includes heated and ventilated seats, automatic climate control, Bluetooth audio and LED lighting as standard, along with configurable attachment settings that let operators save preferred machine responses for different tasks.

With the 844 and 904 X-Tier, Deere is reinforcing a wider shift towards electrified drivetrains becoming a standard part of how wheel loaders balance productivity and operating costs.

Jayson Maina is a technology reporter with a degree in Computer Science from JKUAT. He has covered emerging technologies and their impact on the construction industry for more than a decade.