Skip to main content

Doosan Portable Power wins €2m Saudi Arabia compressor order

Doosan Portable Power (DPP) has won an order worth almost €2 million for portable compressors in Saudi Arabia. The compressors have been purchased by Jeddah-based rental business, EJAR, through TAMGO, the authorised dealer for Doosan compressors, lighting towers and construction tools in Saudi Arabia. The order is for 50 Doosan 9/235HA portable compressors each providing 23.4m³/min of compressed air at a rated operating pressure of 8.6bar.
April 26, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Pictured left to right: Alvaro Pacini, president of Doosan Bobcat EMEA and Fadel Hassan, managing director of TAMGO
3771 Doosan Portable Power (DPP) has won an order worth almost €2 million for portable compressors in Saudi Arabia.  


The compressors have been purchased by Jeddah-based rental business, EJAR, through TAMGO, the authorised dealer for Doosan compressors, lighting towers and construction tools in Saudi Arabia.

The order is for 50 Doosan 9/235HA portable compressors each providing 23.4m³/min of compressed air at a rated operating pressure of 8.6bar.

The 9/235HA is ideal for the full range of compressed air applications from construction, rental, utilities and manufacturing to quarrying, water well drilling, sand blasting and the oil and gas industry.

Gaby Rhayem, regional director Middle East and Africa for Doosan Bobcat EMEA, said: “The 9/235HA is a long-time staple of our industry and is the most popular compressor of its type in the Middle East and Africa.  EJAR chose the 9/235HA for renewal of the company’s rental fleet, based on the outstanding performance and durability of our products over many years.”  

With a well-proven Doosan airend and powered by a fuel-efficient Cummins engine, the 9/235HA compressor has been designed to ensure the unit performance, durability and reliability are guaranteed in the tough environment of the Middle East.

EJAR was formed in 2015 to provide customers with short and medium-term rental solutions. With an array of products including compressors, trucks, lift trucks, cranes and welding machines, EJAR says that it offers affordable, turnkey solutions for everyday rental needs.

TAMGO has long been providing customers in Saudi Arabia with a selected range of the world’s most advanced equipment, backed by outstanding product support, services and solutions. TAMGO specialises in power solutions, as well as industrial and construction equipment.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • MB Crusher: Pushing attachment boundaries since 2001
    June 15, 2023
    For over 20 years, MB Crusher has offered a full line of innovative and patented jaw crusher and screener buckets and accessories for excavators, skid-steer loaders and backhoes of all sizes. Guy Woodford sat down with Alessia Valerio, MB's communications manager, at the recent 31st edition of SaMoTer in Verona to learn more about the company's latest developments and future growth plans
  • Clean power drive for engine sector
    May 31, 2019
    The drive to lower engine emissions is delivering cleaner power solutions – Mike Woof writes
  • VDMA says machine sales now exceed previous year
    September 1, 2017
    The market for earthmoving equipment is booming, according to a report by the German construction machine manufacturers association, the VDMA. In the first six months of this year, the turnover of construction equipment manufacturers was around 19% higher than the already high value of the previous year. In addition, there is an increase in orders of over 18%, as construction equipment is ordered all over the world.
  • How waste plastic and soybean oil are helping our roads last longer
    April 13, 2018
    A new super-modifier is born from waste plastic in Italy and a soybean-based rejuvenator from the US spreads from its home market. By Kristina Smith The two bitumen technologies featured this month come from almost opposing sources. One emerges from the human-created plastic waste plaguing our planet, the other from a plant. However, both technologies have been created with the same aims: to increase the life of roads, saving cost and ultimately reducing the impact of road building on the planet. A coll