Skip to main content

Rubble Master’s rental recipe for success

Rubble Master is this week highlighting the increasing strength of its rental offer and its great potential for further growth. The Austrian compact crushers and screens manufacturer has a large number of its machines rented out at present to customers across Europe, with others rented out to clients in the US.
April 24, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Gerald Hanisch, CEO of Rubble Master, says the company is looking to grow the rental arm of its business

747 Rubble Master is this week highlighting the increasing strength of its rental offer and its great potential for further growth.

The Austrian compact crushers and screens manufacturer has a large number of its machines rented out at present to customers across Europe, with others rented out to clients in the US.

Four compact crushers - RM 60, RM 70 GO!, RM 80 GO!, and RM 100 GO! - are available for rent, together with a multiple of pre and final screens and other options. The models can produce high quality aggregate in quantities up to 80m³ tonnes per hour, 120m³ tonnes per hour, 160 tonnes per hour, and 250 tonnes per hour respectively.

Gerald Hanisch, CEO of Rubble Master, said the percentage of customers renting and then buying rather than outright purchasing Rubble Master compact crushing and screening equipment is growing within the company’s overall sales. “The whole industry is turning to rentals. Around 50% of our compact crusher sales in Germany are converted from rentals, and 40% of the turnover of our Austria subsidiary is from rentals. We feel that we have done our homework and we can roll out our rental offer on an international basis.”

Hanisch said he was confident that an increase in rental agreements would not harm Rubble Master’s ability to meet the aftermarket needs of its outright purchase customers.

Of why renting rather than buying compact crushers was an increasingly popular option among customers, Thierry Venturini, of Buloc, Rubble Master’s eastern France dealer, who is currently renting out two of the company’s range, said: “They are compact and easy to transport, and renting is economical. The machines are very stable, hardly give any trouble and have high throughput.”      

During Rubble Master’s INTERMAT 2015 press conference, Hanisch said that new compact crusher models would be launched by the company later this year. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New innovations in concrete plant development
    January 25, 2017
    In Europe, MCT, Parker Plant, Rapid International and Simem have recently introduced new models to widen their respective ranges of offerings. Meanwhile in the US, CEI Enterprises is now offering an innovative new design of plant. CEI says that it has built the first of its Fusion ready-mix plants and installed it at the company’s manufacturing facility in Albuquerque. The firm is demonstrating the plant, which is said to benefit from hybrid process blending technology. The firm says it has utilised precisi
  • Astec Industries CEO and president Ben Brock says stay focused and true to win
    July 8, 2016
    Core values, constant innovation and looking after the customer are the key drivers for Ben Brock, chief executive officer and president of Astec Industries. How does he keep his company ahead of the pack and what does he think that the future holds? if you ask Ben Brock to explain how his Astec Industries group has managed to do so well for so long, he doesn’t even pause for breath. “That’s easy, I thank the good doctor. He always told me: do good work and take care of the customer ... which is exactl
  • Sandvik gives Argentine advantage to Canteras Amadeo
    February 20, 2014
    Cutting-edge Sandvik Construction equipment is said to be giving ambitious Argentinian quarry firm Canteras Amadeo a commercial advantage Starting life as a one-quarry enterprise in Córdoba, Argentina, in 1999, Canteras Amadeo is a flourishing business with additional operations in Cordoba and Santiago del Estero. Key to its success is said to be its owners’ embrace of technological improvement, and their choice of Sandvik equipment to improve their processes.
  • Aggregates production innovations delivering efficiency
    August 1, 2017
    EvoQuip, the newest division of Terex Corporation, is launching a Cobra 230 impact crusher later this year, to sit alongside the Cobra 260. The 24tonne machine will offer a production capacity of 140-150tonnes/hour in asphalt and construction recycling. The Cobra 230 is 11.3m long and 2.46m wide, or 5.15m wide with a side conveyor. It features a quick set-up time and the machine can be moved onsite without having to stop the crusher. Keestrack says that its novel H4 tracked cone crusher is light and compact