Skip to main content

Novel paver screed design from Sumitomo as company plans global expansion

April 8, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Sumitomo president & CEO, Isamu Mitsuhashi, says that the firm is looking to develop its asphalt paver sales worldwide

Sumitomo is aiming to boost its share of the global market for asphalt pavers. The company is market leader in Japan and plans to develop sales around the globe, according to president & CEO, Isamu Mitsuhashi and regional manager road machinery, Weichao Shi.  

The company has undergone an organisational change to expand its presence in the global paver business. At the moment the firm is only exporting its HA60 model to Europe but believes this model offers performance benefits over competing machines.

The key to a paver’s performance is its screed and in this respect, the firm says its design offers high versatility. Compared with the conventional 2.55-5m or 3-6m screed, the Sumitomo design offers paving widths of 2.3-6m or 2.8-7.5m, without the need for bolt-on extensions. This can save time, labour, and the need for equipment such as forklifts or cranes to manually bolt-on the extensions onsite.

Screed performance is also said to be good by the firm as the strike-off, tamper and vibration (STV) compaction system on the Sumitomo unit is highly effective. The strike-off unit guides the material smoothly to the tamper and vibration plate, providing pre-compaction. It also gives the tamper a longer wear life.

The transport width of the 2.3-6m screed equipped HA60 is 2.49m. A user can close the screed, load on the trailer and go, without having to remove the side-plate on a 2.55m minimum screed and without extra application for the transport width clearance in most countries.  

The Sumitomo machines are also versatile enough to able to work with a range of asphalt types, with warm mix now being used in the market. Mitsuhashi said that in the late 1990s, several private companies in the road pavement sector developed medium-temperature technologies that use additives to reduce the production temperature while maintaining the quality of the asphalt mixture.  

The Japan Road Construction Association (JRA) compiled these technologies and published the "Guide to Medium-Temperature (Low Carbon) Asphalt Pavement" in March 2012. In Japan warm mix asphalts are used typically for duties such as repair work requiring early traffic reopening, or for paving work in mountainous areas involving long-distance transportation, thin-layer paving or winter paving.

Stand C4.513 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Beijing airport runway features novel asphalt solution
    December 7, 2017
    Beijing ranks amongst the five busiest airports across the globe and its runway surfaces face tough stresses as a result. Over 94 million passengers flew through Beijing Capital Airport (BCA) in 2016 and as many as 70 flights/hour can take off and land during peak times. The 60m-wide middle runway of Beijing Capital International Airport is the busiest of the three runways, with a landing and take-off flight ratio of up to 40%. This runway was first rehabilitated in 1996 and then repaired in 2013 and 2015
  • US RCC paving job carried out with Volvo CE machines
    October 21, 2016
    US contractor Conewago Enterprises is using a paver from Volvo CE to lay a roller-compacted concrete (RCC) surface at the Liberty Trust distribution centre in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania. This facility lies close to Interstate-81, which runs through the Appalachian Mountains from the Canada-US border to Tennessee. This 1,376km route carries heavy truck traffic and as a result, hundreds of distribution warehouses have being constructed along the route of this busy transport corridor. Conewago Enterpris
  • Novel dual layer paving work in Germany
    February 2, 2017
    A German contractor is now using two novel asphalt paving technologies from Vögele together for key projects The firm has acquired Vögele’s InLine Pave equipment with its innovative dual layer paving technology as well as one of the SUPER 1800-3i SprayJets for paving a surface course. This combination of technologies is allowing contractor Rask Brandenburg to carry out fast and efficient road rehabilitation work on some major routes, including a busy Autobahn stretch leading into capital Berlin. T
  • The concrete option
    July 31, 2012
    Concrete highway construction techniques and technology continues to evolve. Mike Woof reports The recent increases in oil costs are having a knock-on effect for the road construction sector, as asphalt prices have increased noticeably and faster than those for concrete. This has spurred renewed discussion over which construction technique now offers the best long term solution for road building. The debate between those in favour of concrete and those preferring asphalt for highway construction has been on