Skip to main content

Ma-estro targets fuel theft with its new control system

Ma-estro, which manufactures automation and control systems for quarrying and construction sites, has launched two new products – Fuel Q-Control and Maintenance Q-Control.
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
3938 Ma-Estro, which manufactures automation and control systems for quarrying and construction sites, has launched two new products – Fuel Q-Control and Maintenance Q-Control.

Fuel Q-Control automatically calculates fuel consumption and will also alert the owner by email or SMS if there is abnormal consumption – which can mean fuel theft.
“For big construction companies working in developing countries, fuel theft is a real problem,” said senior technician Ricardo di Agostini. 

The other big benefit of Fuel Q-Control, said di Agostini, is that you can calculate the average fuel consumption of each machine. This helps with planning and preventative maintenance.

Maintenance Q-Control is a maintenance management system that allows the quarry owner to schedule maintenance and also to record unscheduled maintenance.

“Maintenance can take up to 15% of a quarry operator’s cost,” said di Agostini. “Unscheduled maintenance is usually a ‘hidden cost’ because it is never recorded and by the end of the year it is forgotten about.” With Maintenance Q-Control, every time an operator carries out maintenance he can record it using a touch screen.

Organising preventative maintenance will also save operators money, said di Agostini. “Operators often forget about preventative maintenance so the machine will break down, putting the plant out of action and losing tens of thousands of Euros. Accurate planning of maintenance can prevent this happening.”

Both Fuel Q-Control and Maintenance Q-Control can be used in conjunction with Ma-estro’s automation system, Automation Q-Control, or linked up with other makes of automation system. There is a one-off charge for the software and then a yearly fee if users want to store information on Ma-estro’s cloud; larger contractors often choose to store their own data, said di Agostini.

Stand: C2.102

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.ma-estro.com www.ma-estro.com false http://%20www.ma-estro.com/ false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New Holland Construction showcases new low profile cab on F Series graders
    January 6, 2017
    New Holland Construction (NHC) is unveiling at bauma the new low profile cab and FleetForce telematics system in its F Series graders which, the Italian company claims, are the best-selling graders in Europe. The new cab reduces the grader’s maximum height by 180mm, taking it down to just 3.06m. This is said to remove all transport limitations for both F106.7 and F156.7 models, whether they are fitted with 50.8cm or 63.5cm tyres.
  • New Holland Construction showcases new low profile cab on F Series graders
    February 11, 2013
    New Holland Construction (NHC) is unveiling at bauma the new low profile cab and FleetForce telematics system in its F Series graders which, the Italian company claims, are the best-selling graders in Europe. The new cab reduces the grader’s maximum height by 180mm, taking it down to just 3.06m. This is said to remove all transport limitations for both F106.7 and F156.7 models, whether they are fitted with 50.8cm or 63.5cm tyres.
  • Accurate load weighing system from Loadrite
    February 13, 2013
    The Loadrite L2150 wheeled loader bucket weighing system is said to offer increased accuracy and reliability. The system is said to ensure haul trucks can be loaded properly, improving overall productivity by ensuring operational efficiency. Using this weighing system trucks are neither under-loaded nor over-loaded, with the ensuing associated productivity losses and excess machine wear problems respectively, all but eliminated. Aimed at use in large quarry operations the new Loadrite L2150 unit is said to
  • Asphaltica exhibition and conference will provide asphalt road knowledge
    October 31, 2012
    The global economy is still suffering, and many believe investment in road and other infrastructure is the key to its revival Over the past 14 years in Italy, only 187km of new highways have been made, but, at the same time, the amount of vehicles using the country’s roads has grown by nearly 10 million. It is in this context of financial concern and growing burden on existing road infrastructure that the sixth edition of ASPHALTICA, the only European event exclusively dedicated to the world of asphalt, bit