Skip to main content

Kobelco Construction Machinery chooses lithium ion battery technology for its 21tonne hybrid

Kobelco Construction Machinery claims that its 21tonne hybrid excavator, the SK210H, is the world’s first lithium ion battery powered hybrid excavator. Compared to super capacitors, the Japanese maker has found that li-ion battery packs are able to retain their charge for longer, and can deliver a near-constant flow of power making engine fuel management much more efficient, while reducing spikes in operating performance. A large capacity, 200kg lithium-ion battery pack in the SK210H has the ability to d
April 25, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
SK210H uses lithium ion batteries for energy storage
2200 Kobelco Construction Machinery claims that its 21tonne hybrid excavator, the SK210H, is the world’s first lithium ion battery powered hybrid excavator.


Compared to super capacitors, the Japanese maker has found that li-ion battery packs are able to retain their charge for longer, and can deliver a near-constant flow of power making engine fuel management much more efficient, while reducing spikes in operating performance.

A large capacity, 200kg lithium-ion battery pack in the SK210H has the ability to deliver 25kW of power to the excavator through a motor-generator and an electric slew motor, to compliment the machine’s 123kW Hino engine.

But, rather than downsizing the engine department, the SK210H uses the same power unit as its non-hybrid stablemate, the SK210LC.

“Operators place digging power at the top of the list,” said Makoto Kato, managing director of Kobelco Construction Machinery Europe. “So, we use the hybrid energy to substitute available engine power.”

Clever electronics automatically adjust engine mapping to remove up to 25kW from the engine’s output, and replace it with electrical power. This means the SK210H always delivers a combined power peak of 123kW, greatly reducing the amount of diesel fuel needed to maintain its output.

Kobelco Construction Machinery Europe said that fuel consumption of its hybrid excavator is 12% less than the non-hybrid SK210LC, and it reinforces its technology with a five-year, 10,000-hour warranty on the battery technology.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Kobelco introduces SK210D car dismantling machine
    January 6, 2017
    Kobelco Construction Machinery Europe’s latest addition to its excavator range, the Kobelco SK210D, is a Japanese-made specialist car dismantling machine. The Kobelco SK210D, which will start to arrive in Europe in April 2015, is a dedicated unit designed to safely and carefully separate a full automobile chassis into manageable parts prior to disposal thus reclaiming key metal and recyclable products. It can also be used in agriculture, aviation, white goods and truck reclamation, where precise dismantli
  • Electrifying! Komatsu’s Proterra-powered PC210E excavator 
    October 26, 2022
    Komatsu has unveiled a 20tonne PC210E electric hydraulic excavator equipped with a Proterra-manufactured lithium-ion battery system.
  • Komatsu to launch different sized hybrid excavators in “1 to 2 years”
    January 6, 2017
    Komatsu will be bringing different-sized hybrid excavators to the market in the next “one or two years”, the Japanese construction equipment manufacturing giant revealed at INTERMAT 2015. The new models will follow on from last year’s successful launch of the third-generation HB215LC-2, on show this week. “There are plans to extend the hybrid concept to other sizes of excavators. This development is ongoing,” said Keiko Fujiwara, chief executive officer of KEISA (Komatsu Europe International). Asked when th
  • Komatsu to launch different sized hybrid excavators in “1 to 2 years”
    April 21, 2015
    Komatsu will be bringing different-sized hybrid excavators to the market in the next “one or two years”, the Japanese construction equipment manufacturing giant revealed at INTERMAT 2015. The new models will follow on from last year’s successful launch of the third-generation HB215LC-2, on show this week. “There are plans to extend the hybrid concept to other sizes of excavators. This development is ongoing,” said Keiko Fujiwara, chief executive officer of KEISA (Komatsu Europe International). Asked when th