Skip to main content

Hamm’s crushing option

Hamm is now offering a novel crusher drum option for its soil compactors. This innovative feature transforms a soil compactor into a machine suitable for road recycling applications. Hamm’s marketing director, Gottfried Beer, explained that this special drum broadens the versatility of the standard soil compactor and allows contractors with existing machines to carry out additional types of work. While soil compactors have been fitted with crusher drums before, these have been comparatively limited in the r
April 18, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Hamm is offering a novel crusher drum for its soil compactors
228 Hamm is now offering a novel crusher drum option for its soil compactors.

This innovative feature transforms a soil compactor into a machine suitable for road recycling applications.

Hamm’s marketing director, Gottfried Beer, explained that this special drum broadens the versatility of the standard soil compactor and allows contractors with existing machines to carry out additional types of work. While soil compactors have been fitted with crusher drums before, these have been comparatively limited in the range of applications they can handle and the new Hamm unit benefits from far greater versatility.

The 1.68m diameter drum features toolholders welded in place and these can be fitted with milling type picks. And Beer explained that the machine is versatile. He said, “You can put different cutters on it.”

Mounting the drum on the firm’s H25i soil compactor allows the machine to be used for crushing old concrete road surfaces so that the material can then be removed and possibly processed nearby for re-use as a sub-base prior to laying a new surface over the top.

One application where the machine has been tested is on a highway in Austria, where it was used to break up the old concrete surface. Another duty has been to break up the floor of a new tunnel close to Leipzig, as the rock was too aggressive to be milled and would have resulted in excessive cutter wear. Meanwhile, the machine has a third application, for secondary breaking of rock found in uneven surfaces.

Beer explained that the customer can adapt the machine to the application requirements by fitting different types of picks in the holders, as well as padfoot plates for more conventional compaction duties. As the concept is still new, Hamm is still discovering options for this adapted machine and Beer said, “We can use four different cutters now but we’ll possibly have more in the future.”

Stand: F10.1011/1012

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 12717 0 oLinkExternal www.Hamm.eu www.Hamm.eu false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12717 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Lintec showcases redesigned CSD 1500 plant at bauma
    February 12, 2013
    Especially redesigned to allow hot and cold recycling, Lintec will be showcasing its new CSD 1500 asphalt mixing plant at bauma. With a capacity of 120 tonnes/hour, the new CSD 1500 enables the integration of a hot storage silo with a 50tonne capacity. Similar to all Lintec’s CSD line plants, the aggregates enter the screen drum through the front wall.
  • Nylacast is offering hard wearing plastic components
    January 6, 2017
    Nylacast said that its improved self-lubricating plastic components are finding new markets in North America. The plastic parts suit duties in applications such as booms for cranes, access platforms and telehandlers. Because the material is self-lubricating, it offers long wear life in this type of installation and reduces maintenance needs and costs for the machine user.
  • Nylacast is offering hard wearing plastic components
    March 11, 2014
    Nylacast said that its improved self-lubricating plastic components are finding new markets in North America. The plastic parts suit duties in applications such as booms for cranes, access platforms and telehandlers. Because the material is self-lubricating, it offers long wear life in this type of installation and reduces maintenance needs and costs for the machine user.
  • It’s a deadly business for contractors painting road markings
    August 4, 2015
    Animal welfare groups in the Republic of Ireland are angry over the apparent insensitive act by a road making contractor who painted a yellow line over a dead cat on the side of the highway. A report by Irish newspapers quoted one person saying it was “shameful” and “nobody cared enough to move this poor cat who had been killed by a car and the line was painted over it”.