Skip to main content

Case eases into the hybrid excavator market

It is early days yet for Case to make the jump into the hybrid excavator market, but the Italian company chose to show off a prototype at Intermat to many curious onlookers. Only several, based on the proven CX210 tracked crawler excavator, have actually been built and sold, all in Japan, by Case’s technology partner Sumitomo. Massimilano Sala, Case’s construction equipment product manager for EMEA, said Case is keeping a close eye on it’s performance in the longer run as a “reference point” for when Cas
April 22, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A prototype of the hybrid at Intermat
It is early days yet for 176 Case to make the jump into the hybrid excavator market, but the Italian company chose to show off a prototype at Intermat to many curious onlookers.

Only several, based on the proven CX210 tracked crawler excavator, have actually been built and sold, all in Japan, by Case’s technology partner 2714 Sumitomo. Massimilano Sala, Case’s construction equipment product manager for EMEA, said Case is keeping a close eye on it’s performance in the longer run as a “reference point” for when Case decides to take it and market it in Europe.

The regular model X210D has an EU Stage IV/Tier 4 Final compliant engine. But the prototype, at the moment, is not saleable in Europe because its engine meets only EPA Tier 4 Interim / EU Stage IIIB emissions regulations.

Even so, it has been reducing fuel consumption as well as NOx and CO2 emissions, and saves an average of 15% fuel compared to the standard hydraulic excavator of the same model. So the outlook is good and Sala expects the market to increase in the next five or six years with more equipment makers entering the fray.

The machine converts energy generated when the upper structure reduces its swing speed and stores the energy in an accumulator/capacitor system, located outside at the front right of the machine, and uses it to assist the power of the engine through the power generation motor when the engine accelerates.

The 21tonne hybrid also has Field View Monitor (FVM) as a safety system which enables the operator to have a so-called bird’s eye view 270° behind.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Caterpillar offering improved long reach excavators
    January 18, 2016
    Caterpillar has developed new long reach excavators for applications needing deep digging or excavating at extended distances. The machines can be used for working in sand and gravel pits, shaping long slopes, and cleaning settling ponds. The new models can be used for digging and lifting applications as they features large buckets and heavy-duty high/wide undercarriages that provide added stability over the side. These special-application 340F and 352F machines are designed by Caterpillar engineers. Th
  • Clean diesels
    February 21, 2012
    Perkins has unveiled its first Tier 4 Final emissions compliant engines. The new 400F meets Tier 4 Final/Stage IIIB regulations and is said to be well-proven due to extensive testing.
  • Earthmoving machine sales improved
    April 2, 2019
    have increased since the second half of 2017. In particular, in Germany and France the main constraint is a shortage of labour, while in Spain or the United Kingdom the main brake is demand. Sustained dynamics for investments in Central Eastern Europe, with the exception of the construction market in Turkey, going decidedly against the trend compared to 2017. Overall, however, the implementation of EU funds during the 2014-2020 programming cycle has supported construction, particularly civil engineering.
  • A clean fuel future
    November 13, 2024
    Researchers at the University of Sheffield are exploring new exhaust aftertreatment systems for heavy-duty engines capable of running on clean, zero-carbon fuels such as ammonia.