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

  • Doosan’s high performance, heavyweight excavator
    February 21, 2020
    Doosan is introducing a high-performance, heavyweight crawler excavator in the shape of the DX800LC-5B. This machine is aimed at the 80tonne crawler excavator class in emergent territories and is said to offer optimum value to the end-user. Advantages are said to include high productivity and fuel efficiency, as well as operator comfort, improved reliability and durability and maximum uptime. It is designed to meet the needs of heavy-duty quarrying applications as well as major infrastructure construction projects.
  • OEMs take a walk down to Electric Avenue
    April 27, 2018
    Where the diesel engine was once the simple solution for OEMs wanting a power source, recent emissions regulations have added such cost and complexity to the diesel-fuelled internal combustion engine that there are now other simpler, solutions on the horizon. That’s the message from Julie Furber, executive director of Cummins electrified power business, who believes that electrification will be the new, simple power solution. “As a provider of power sources, Cummins is in a position to give its customers an
  • Cummins opens new pilot installation facility in Germany
    December 6, 2023
    Cummins is opening a new pilot installation facility in Germany.
  • Bomag’s president Ralf Junker puts his faith in BIM
    November 8, 2017
    World Highways recently caught up with Ralf Junker, president of BOMAG Group, during the company’s Innovation Days at its headquarters in Germany. David Arminas reports. Ralf Junker hasn’t forgotten his roots. You can put as much machine control as you like on a piece of construction equipment but all that high-technology is for nothing if the build quality isn’t there. Junker knows something about build quality. When he started at BOMAG in 1988, he was in the welding shop, eventually becoming supervisor