Skip to main content

LiuGong 900E excavators “very key” for company future

A senior LiuGong figure says the company’s keenly awaited 900E Series excavator is a “very key machine” for its future. Dave Beatenbough, vice president of the Chinese construction equipment manufacturing giant’s research and development arm, said production of the model at LiuGong’s Dressta base in Poland was expected to begin “within three months”.
April 16, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
David Beatenbough, vice president Liugong R&D, and Zeng Guang’an, vice chairman and president of Liugong, have talked about the company’s ambitious plans to increase its market share
A senior 269 LiuGong figure says the company’s keenly awaited 900E Series excavator is a “very key” model for its future.

Dave Beatenbough, vice president of the Chinese construction equipment manufacturing giant’s research and development arm, said production of the model at LiuGong’s 3420 Dressta base in Poland was expected to begin “within three months”.

“We see a lot of advantages in the 900E Series. It’s going to be a very key model for LiuGong’s future,” he exclaimed.

“This year we will probably build 200 machines. In 2014, I would expect we’d be producing 500 units. As Zeng Guang’an, LiuGong vice chairman and president, said at the company’s bauma 2013 press conference, we would like to produce 3,000 units per year. I think that’s a reasonable short to medium-term capacity number. Whether we have that in five or six years, I don’t know.”

Of the progress made with LiuGong’s Dressta subsidiary, Beatenbough said, “We acquired Dressta because we wanted a full line of bulldozers; we got that.

Secondly, we wanted a European production base; we got that. Thirdly, we wanted a very highly skilled workforce that understands construction machinery and understands quality. The fourth reason for me, selfishly, was that we wanted a good strong R&D team.

“When we got hold of Dressta it was a tired company. It had just come through the downturn and was not capable of recovering completely. The dealers were tired. Everybody was tired. There was no new investment to rebuild things. Within pretty short order, we were able to make significant improvements in productivity, the efficiency from the manufacturing side in particular. That work continues.”

Beatenbough said LiuGong Poland is expected to be a strong part of LiuGong, with a factory constantly working at capacity. “We’re going to get to that capacity by increasing bulldozer and pipelayer sales, but also by producing LiuGong technology machines in Poland for sale in the surrounding markets,” he added.

Although most of the current wheeled loader and excavator production in Poland is for the CIS and Russia, he explained, in future LiuGong expects manufacturing output at the factory to supply more of Europe.

He said LiuGong wanted to double, or perhaps triple, machine production in Poland “within five years”. That would also represent, said Beatenbough, a seven or eight time increase on 2011 production levels, before LiuGong bought the factory.

The quality and capability of LiuGong’s near 1,000 engineers had “improved tremendously” in the last five years, said Beatenbough, supporting the firm’s research and development ambitions.

“Our engineers spend a lot of time visiting the market. We have engineers in almost every country we sell in. Every year we send people to the markets and they bring information back. They’re learning how to assemble that information into sensible product plans. We’ve introduced the LiuGong Development Process. One of the key elements of that progress is developing product definition. This was a very big learning experience for LiuGong.”
Beatenbough said product definition is explaining what is and isn’t going to be included in a new model, defining its specifications, options available for it, and the expected life of the machine. “The only way to do a good product definition is to go out and talk to people,” he added.

At the press conference company president Guang’an talked about the progress of the company’s joint venture with leading engine manufacturer 196 Cummins and driveline specialists ZF.

Guang’an said that a joint venture with leading manufacturers of electronic controls were among other joint ventures that would interest LiuGong, but stressed that no deal was imminent.

While Beatenbough says Brazil is one of several countries where LiuGong is looking to open new production facilities, he added that there were no plans to open new sites anywhere in the world in 2013 into 2014.

“We match our expansion in the markets pretty closely to our growth plans. We don’t go out and just buy something to be bigger. But if it fits, and if it matches a sensible strategy, then we will invest in manufacturing and support facilities,” he said.

The company has cut back working hours in its 19 Chinese factories due to the current flat domestic sales market.

“Everybody is well aware that last year was down considerably – 30-35% – and the first quarter of 2013 was down 20%,” said Beatenbough. “But we have seen that March [2013] was the first month in about 18 months where year-on-year there was an increase. One month is not enough to make a trend, but at least there’s an indication of growth. I don’t think there’ll be tremendous growth this year, maybe 5 maybe 10%.”

Stand: F4.417

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 12733 0 oLinkExternal www.liugong.com www.liugong.com false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12733 false false%>

%$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 11560 0 oLinkInternal <span class="oLinkInternal"><span class="oLinkInternal">View more videos</span></span> Video false /event-news/bauma-2013/video/ true false%>
No video provider was found to handle the given URL. See the documentation for more information.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Zoomlion looks to expand its operations through organic growth and acquisitions
    April 17, 2012
    Zoomlion is set to grow its operations as Helen Huang, general manager for the firm’s construction hoist machinery branch explained. The firm intends capitalise on its purchase of the tower crane technology from German firm Jost. Huang said, “We have a two year licence with Jost. We purchased the whole set of topless tower crane technology. This is arranged as a two year technology transfer, although there may be the option to extend the period.”
  • Chengyu makes tracks for worldwide market
    January 6, 2017
    Chinese undercarriage component manufacturer Chengyu Machinery Equipment has set its sights on increasing exports to world markets. The company makes track rollers, carrier rollers, idlers, sprockets and track chain assemblies for machines from two to 40tonnes and exports 60% of its output. It said its products are crack- and abrasion-resistant and with high quality control procedures – only 25 parts in a million fail its quality control. Both its product delivery and after-sales service levels are said to
  • Chengyu makes tracks for worldwide market
    April 22, 2013
    Chinese undercarriage component manufacturer Chengyu Machinery Equipment has set its sights on increasing exports to world markets. The company makes track rollers, carrier rollers, idlers, sprockets and track chain assemblies for machines from two to 40tonnes and exports 60% of its output. It said its products are crack- and abrasion-resistant and with high quality control procedures – only 25 parts in a million fail its quality control. Both its product delivery and after-sales service levels are said to
  • VIDEO: Road safety advertisements – you laugh, you cry
    September 12, 2016
    Governments, police forces and parent groups have use various messages to warn the public about dangerous driving and some have been more effective than others.


    Two recent examples – one from New Zealand and one from Australia – make their point in different ways. The New Zealand video - ‘don’t use a mobile phone while driving’ – gets the message across with gentle humour.

    The Australian video – ‘don’t drink and drive’ – employs intense drama to ensure a mark is left on the viewer.