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Earthmoving · 25 Years

Machine Receivers — Grade from the cab.

Get accurate height readings from inside the cab while you work. No jumping in and out. No off-sider holding a staff. Just responsive, reliable grade information on every pass — bolted, clamped or magnetised to your machine and ready for a long day.

RedBack MR706 machine receiver mounted to an excavator dipper arm
10 modelsMagnet, clamp, or pole-mount — covering excavators, dozers and blades
IP66/67Metal chassis — rated for mud, dust and daily worksite knocks
1KmDetection range on the MR825WD with a Class 3 laser
The Range

Shop Machine Receivers

Seven machine-mounted receivers — magnet, clamp, or both. Wired in-cab displays on the D models, wireless display on the MR825WD. Pick by how your machine mounts and how much information you want in the cab.

How it works

Three steps to grade from the cab

A rotating laser sets the reference plane. The machine receiver picks it up. The cut or fill matches.

1

Set your rotating laser at a known datum height

Set up your red-beam rotating laser on solid ground clear of the work area and switch it to rotate. Establish the instrument height above a known datum or RL — use a staff and handheld receiver if needed. That spinning laser plane becomes your reference grade for the entire job.

2

Mount the receiver on your machine

Fix the machine receiver to your excavator dipper arm, blade pole or machine frame at the height that matches your target grade. Use the magnet mounts for steel excavator surfaces, or the clamp mounts for round-pole setups on dozers, skid steers and box blades.

3

Cut or fill to match the grade

Watch the LED indicators on the receiver — or on the in-cab display if you have a D-series or MR825WD model. When the on-grade indicator lights up, your cutting edge or blade is at the correct level. Raise or lower until you hit on-grade, then work across the site maintaining that reading.

Use cases

Who’s using a machine receiver on site?

Built for the operators running the machine — fewer trips out of the cab, more time on the controls.

Why RedBack

The RedBack difference

Anyone can sell a machine receiver. Few build them for the seat.

Built for the seat, not the spec sheet

Metal chassis, IP66/67 rating, and 250–260mm sensor windows with four bands covering 360°. LED indicators sized for visibility from the cab, not a service counter. Made to work, every day, wherever you work.

Built to last, built to be repaired

Solid construction, built for the long term. RedBack provides in-house repair and calibration services for all RedBack lasers and most other laser brands.

Real support, real people

Call us and you’ll speak to someone who knows the products. No scripts, no call centre, no runaround — just straight answers from people who’ve set up hundreds of these.

FAQ

Machine Receiver Questions

Which machine-mounted laser receiver should I choose?
It comes down to three things: how your receiver will mount to the machine, whether you want a display inside the cab, and how much information you need while you work. For excavators, a magnetic mount like the MR706 or MR706D attaches directly to the dipper arm. For pole-mounted setups (dozer or box blade) a clamp mount like the MR708 or MR708D is the right fit. If you want both magnet and clamp options, look at the MR710 / MR710D. The premium MR825WD adds a wireless in-cab display, blade tilt and plumb swing indication.
What accuracy can I expect from a machine receiver?
All MR7 series receivers offer two accuracy settings. Fine mode gives you ±3–5 mm — tight enough for finished grades and concrete prep. Coarse mode opens up to ±5–25 mm, which suits bulk earthworks where you want faster indication without the receiver constantly hunting. The MR825WD has three settings: ±5 mm, ±10 mm, and ±20 mm.
What lasers are machine receivers compatible with?
All RedBack machine receivers work with red-beam rotating lasers rated Class 2 or Class 3. They’re not compatible with green-beam lasers or line lasers. The MR825WD has a detection range of approximately 200 m radius when paired with a Class 3 red-beam laser. See the “Compatible rotating lasers” section above.
Which receiver is best for an excavator?
A magnetic laser receiver. The magnet mount attaches directly to the dipper arm. The MR706 is the entry point; the MR706D adds a wired in-cab display. If you also want blade tilt and plumb swing indication, the MR825WD is the premium choice and includes both magnetic and clamp mounts.
Which receiver is best for a skid steer, dozer or grader blade?
A clamp mount receiver that attaches to a 40–50 mm pole or tube. The MR708 is the laser receiver for skid steer and blade work without a cab display. The MR708D adds the wired in-cab display. If you run a mix of machines, the MR710 and MR710D include both clamp and magnet mounts.
Do I need an in-cab display?
Not always, but most operators find them worth it. Without a display, you read height from the LEDs on the receiver itself. The wired D models bring that reading into the cab on a 10 m cabled display. The MR825WD goes further with a wireless display that mounts inside the cab with a magnet, suction cup or clamp. If you spend long days grading or digging to level, an in-cab display pays for itself.
What does blade tilt and plumb swing tell me?
These are features exclusive to the MR825WD. Blade tilt shows whether the blade or bucket is tilted left or right. Plumb swing shows whether the arm is swinging forward or back from vertical. Together, they give the operator a live read on bucket angle and arm position without stopping work to check manually.
What happens if the machine body blocks the laser beam?
All RedBack machine receivers include a last-height-detected indicator. When the beam is temporarily blocked, the display holds the last known reading. The 250 mm reception window on the MR7 series (260 mm on the MR825WD) catches the beam across a wider range of machine movement before losing signal.
Real support. Real people.

25 years of specialist advice. One call away.

Not sure which machine receiver matches your machine and laser? Call and speak to someone who’s set up hundreds of these — no scripts, no call centre.