Skip to main content

Tesmec’s ‘Trenchtronic’ technology takes trenchers towards full automation

Tesmec has developed new technology for its range of trenchers, which makes its machines ‘almost automatic’, according to business development director Paolo Celeri. ‘Trenchtronic’ allows the trenchers to self-adjust the engine load and travelling speed, depending on the soil type.
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Tesmec’s new ‘Trenchtronic’ technology reduces chance of errors due to operator inexperience
2342 Tesmec has developed new technology for its range of trenchers, which makes its machines ‘almost automatic’, according to business development director Paolo Celeri.

‘Trenchtronic’ allows the trenchers to self-adjust the engine load and travelling speed, depending on the soil type.

“There can be problems with these machines due to a lack of experience of the operators,” said Celeri. “We wanted to find a solution and came up with a system which reduces the influence of the operator.

“Our goal is to produce a drone machine, something we – and many other manufacturers – are working on.”  A fully-automated solution could be less than five years away, he added.

Celeri called on utility contractors to think more intelligently when selecting the right machine for the job. “One trencher can have the productivity of six to 10 excavators for a specific job, such as laying a pipeline or fibre optics,” he said. “And with an excavator, you typically over-excavate by 30 to 50%, which doesn’t happen with a trencher.

“It’s important that we make our engines less polluting, but we also need to change our approach to the way we do the work.”

To help customers further increase efficiencies, Tesmec has also introduced remote monitoring systems (Re.M). “We offer it as a service,” said Celeri. “We can see how a machine is working, what its engine load is, whether it is working or idle. And we can then transfer the data to the client to help them understand how they could improve performance.

www.tesmec.com

View more stories

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Evonik’s Dynavis technology helps fine-tune machinery
    January 6, 2017
    Dynavis, a major additive product from Evonik. helps fine-tune engines, pumps, drive systems and hydraulics. “A simple change of hydraulic fluid can help save fuel, even—and particularly—in used construction machines,” says Rolf Fianke, technology aftermarket support manager at Evonik. In Italy, Nuova Ghizzoni, an Italian pipeline contractor, switched its entire fleet of hydraulic excavators to a fluid formulated with Dynavis technology supplied by a Dynavis licensee. The switch was a move away from c
  • Brokk offers painless bridge work
    February 10, 2020
    Peter Bigwood* makes the case for using remote-controlled demolition machines to demolish bridge decks
  • Tecnotest has powerful new touch screen
    January 6, 2017
    Materials testing equipment manufacturer Tecnotest has launched a powerful new touch-screen display unit, Touchtronic. “We were not the first to introduce the touch screen, but this has given us the opportunity to see what other firms provide and to enhance it,” said Tecnotest overseas and regional European sales manager Patricia Sarson.
  • Tecnotest has powerful new touch screen
    April 19, 2013
    Materials testing equipment manufacturer Tecnotest has launched a powerful new touch-screen display unit, Touchtronic. “We were not the first to introduce the touch screen, but this has given us the opportunity to see what other firms provide and to enhance it,” said Tecnotest overseas and regional European sales manager Patricia Sarson.