Skip to main content

FAE Group’s new remote-controlled units now accept multiple attachments and new options for road maintenance

By Kristina Smith June 18, 2025 Read time: 1 min
The RCU 75, fitted with road planer attachment

FAE Group has updated its remote-controlled unit (RCU) range so that the machines can accept attachments from any manufacturer. The plates to which the attachments are fitted now have standard skid-steer brackets.

“This means that we can now use every kind of attachment on the market, making it more versatile,” said FAE Group sales director Davide Barratta.

The RCUs can operate safely on slopes of up to 45 degrees and were originally designed to carry a mulching attachment for land clearance. But they can also be deployed with a road planer attachment, said Barratta, to improve productivity and safety.

“The machine can be controlled from the front rather than from the cabin which could give better control of the machine,” he said. 

“And, with a road planer, there is often a second worker in front of the machine, checking that it is moving in a straight line. That wouldn’t be needed with the RCU.”

The first of the three multi-purpose, remote-controlled tracked carriers, the 55 horsepower RCU55 was launched in 2022, with the RCU 75 and RCU 120 released subsequently. 

The RCUs are already selling well for mulching applications, says Barratta, but with the added flexibility of attachments, FAE Group hopes to see them used in a wider range of applications.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • In control - with machine control technology
    June 21, 2016
    Advances with machine control technologies are providing major benefits right across the construction sector - Mike Woof writes With the massive bauma 2016 exhibition now having run its course, the construction sector look set to benefit from a range of new machine control technologies. These systems are being offered across a range of different segments in the equipment sector. Bulldozing was one of the first portions of the earthmoving segment to benefit from machine control systems, but a vast array o
  • Intelligence for compact construction machines
    November 13, 2024
    Trimble is delivering intelligence for compact construction machines.
  • Advanced, low emission, fuel efficient earthmoving
    February 23, 2012
    Manufacturers are rolling out sophisticated machines for the European, North American and Japanese markets - Mike Woof reports. This year has been a pivotal period for the development of advanced, low emission earthmoving machines. During 2011 an array of manufacturers have introduced new models designed to comply with the latest Stage IIIB/Tier 4 Interim emissions regulations introduced for
  • Advances in concrete paving materials
    July 9, 2012
    Innovations in materials technology, as well as machines, could provide a major boost to the concrete paving sector - Mike Woof reports Development of new material technologies for the concrete paving sector continues apace and the latest innovations could provide the biggest boost for this market in many years. High performance cementitious material (HPCM) is an innovative concept that has been developed and tested for road surfacing applications as part of a project in which the UK's Transport Research La