Skip to main content

Lintec’s first Aggregates Cooling System sold to Dubai

A new, patented Aggregates Cooling System (ACS) was one of the main taking points on the stand of asphalt and concrete plant manufacturer Lintec at Conexpo. Lintec has just sold its first ever plant to concrete manufacturer Emirates Beton in Dubai. When mixing concrete in warm climates, aggregate has to be cooled in order to maintain the performance and quality of the finished product, explained Lintec managing director Carsten Weiss: “If you don’t cool it, you don’t get the strength at the end,” he said. “
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
A new, patented Aggregates Cooling System (ACS) was one of the main taking points on the stand of asphalt and concrete plant manufacturer Lintec at Conexpo. 1177 Lintec has just sold its first ever plant to concrete manufacturer Emirates Beton in Dubai.

When mixing concrete in warm climates, aggregate has to be cooled in order to maintain the performance and quality of the finished product, explained Lintec managing director Carsten Weiss: “If you don’t cool it, you don’t get the strength at the end,” he said. “And that is vital if you are constructing a dam for a big hydroelectric project or a skyscraper.”

The standard method for cooling aggregate is to use ice, but producing the ice demands lots of energy. By using the ACS, which can be fitted to new or existing plants, manufacturers can save 50% on energy costs, according to Weiss. “We are talking about substantial amounts of money here,” said Weiss.

Lintec signed up a US dealer for its ACS at the Conexpo show and is looking for others in North America.

The manufacturer was also displaying its warm mix asphalt (WMA) technology LEP (Lintec Ecological Processing). This system uses foamed bitumen to reduce the mix temperature from 180°C to 100°C, resulting in energy savings, less carbon emissions and less emissions of other harmful gases.

Lintec has a strong market in South America, with a subsidiary in São Paolo. Many South Americans had visited the stand, said Weiss.
www.lintec-gmbh.de

Related Content

  • Comer Industries introduces latest axles
    January 6, 2017
    Comer Industries is using bauma to introduce its next generation of axles, wheel drives and heavy-duty track drives. Products on display at bauma include the series of new-generation axles starting from S-228, developed to provide high braking and efficient performance. The S-228-238 line was designed and built for applications including earthmoving. On display at bauma is the S-238, which has a dynamic load capacity of 12,000daN and a static load capacity of 22,000daN.
  • Comer Industries introduces latest axles
    April 15, 2013
    Comer Industries is using bauma to introduce its next generation of axles, wheel drives and heavy-duty track drives. Products on display at bauma include the series of new-generation axles starting from S-228, developed to provide high braking and efficient performance. The S-228-238 line was designed and built for applications including earthmoving. On display at bauma is the S-238, which has a dynamic load capacity of 12,000daN and a static load capacity of 22,000daN.
  • Successful Eurobitume conference in Istanbul
    June 26, 2012
    The Eurasphalt & Eurobitume 2012 event in Turkey has attracted record attendance figures - Mike Woof reports A strong focus on sustainability has been the focus for the 5th Eurasphalt & Eurobitume Congress held in June 2012 at Turkey’s Istanbul Lutfi Kirdar Congress Centre. The conference had as its theme: Asphalt, the sustainable road to success and attracted the highest ever number of attendees for this four yearly event. In one of the opening presentations Turkey’s transport minister, Binali Yildirim, sp
  • Strongest ever year for testing equipment firm Humboldt
    January 6, 2017
    Construction testing equipment manufacturer Humboldt has the strongest forward order book ever, said general manager John Lamond at Conexpo. The firm relocated at the end of last year to a bigger manufacturing facility: a 6,970 sq m factory in Elgin, Illinois. “We needed to expand,” said Lamond. “It’s a bigger and better location for us as a growing business.”