Skip to main content

Danfoss trials for Volvo excavators

Danfoss Power Solutions, a supplier of mobile and industrial hydraulics, has partnered with Ashcourt Group to test the Danfoss Dextreme system in three Volvo excavators.
September 21, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Field trials of a Danfoss Dextreme hydraulic system in Volvo excavators in the UK could show greater productivity and a reduction in fuel use

Ashcourt, a building materials supplier based in East Yorkshire, England, said it expects the Danfoss system to increase the productivity of its machines while reducing fuel consumption.

For the Ashcourt trials – which started in February - the three 20-tonne diesel-powered Volvo EC200 excavators have been fitted with the Dextreme Swap system in collaboration with UK Volvo dealership SMT. The system replaces the excavator’s main hydraulic pump with a Digital Displacement Pump, custom software and controller.

Two of the Volvo machines are being used at the company’s Partridge Hall Quarry in East Yorkshire. The third operates at a nearby material washing facility. Each machine is forecast to complete 2,000 operating hours within the year. To compare operating data with Ashcourt’s existing fleet of standard Volvo EC200 machines, each excavator has been fitted with data logging equipment.

Dextreme Swap is the first level within the Dextreme system solution pathway. As the simplest configuration of the Dextreme system, it is predicted to lower fuel consumption by 15 percent. The pathway consists of three levels — Swap, Flex and Max — and is predicted to deliver fuel savings of up to 50 percent in excavators of all sizes. The Danfoss Digital Displacement pump is, according to the manufacturer, “the first and only truly digitally controlled hydraulic pump for off-highway machinery”. The pump's dedicated digital controller activates each piston individually, providing fast and accurate response to system demand, enabling superior machine controllability. The pump provides unmatched full and part load efficiency by using only the pistons needed to meet the load.

“So far, the feedback from our operators has been uniformly positive,” said John Hood, Ashcourt Group plant director. “The fuel savings I can’t speak to yet, but my team is telling me the new machines are very responsive and strong, with the EC200 performing more like an EC250.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Concrete testing - defining standards
    February 13, 2012
    Concrete is a versatile construction product, but it must be tested to make sure that it is fit for purpose
  • Improved Volvo Penta engine
    October 18, 2021
    Volvo Penta has improved its powerful D16 engine, introducing a version featuring five key upgrades
  • Game-changing ideas that deliver daily life and continue to evolve
    December 14, 2016
    As World Highways celebrates its 25-year anniversary this month, we thought that it would be a good moment to take a step back and look at the exciting times we live and work in, and pick out a few of the game-changing new products, technologies and services that have brought about so much innovation in our industry over the past quarter of a century. Where will these new ways of thinking and working take us next? The global highways market has been transformed in the lifetime of World Highways by high-v
  • Bobcat’s new E25 2.5tonne compact excavator
    May 28, 2013
    The weight distribution in Bobcat’s new E25 reduced tail swing (RTS) compact excavator is said to be optimised through the use of proven ‘4-plate box’ technology to reduce he weight of the workgroup, which moves the centre of gravity of the machine towards the back of the excavator. As a result, the E25 does not require any additional counterweight. This enhances the stability and ensures that the E25 model can be transported by trailer more easily.