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

  • 'Growth opportunities worldwide' for construction machines
    March 19, 2012
    Wirtgen brothers Jürgen and Stefan discussed growth opportunities. Jürgen Wirtgen and Stefan Wirtgen are joint presidents of the Wirtgen Group and see business levels continuing to improve. Stefan said, “Generally speaking we are surprised with the growth levels, especially in the BRIC countries. It is giving us quite a big boost and is allowing us to grow. We are more than happy with 2011 so far as the order books are full and we didn’t expect this.”
  • Cat's emerging pavers
    January 4, 2013
    Caterpillar paving products are in demand worldwide, with the firm placing great importance on its offering to Africa and Middle East customers, as Guy Woodford reports. Caterpillar’s new CW34 pneumatic compactor, first exhibited at Intermat 2012 in Paris, is a valued machine in some of the company’s key regional markets, according to Gianluca Lombardi, Cat’s EAME (Europe, Africa and Middle East) paving products regional sales support consultant. It’s an important machine for the Africa and Middle East mark
  • Austrian 'first' for Hazemag
    February 6, 2012
    Hazemag has supplied what it claims is the first semi-mobile impact roll crusher plant in Austria to Zementwerk Leube, one of the country's leading companies in the building materials industry. The compact, semi-mobile design 600-800tonnes/hour limestone crushing plant includes the integration of a feeder grate as a primary screen. "Even with high throughput and the large feed size of up to 1.2m the end product had to have a final crush size of 0-250mm with a minimal amount of fines production in the final
  • Fast flyover removal with specialist demolition equipment
    July 12, 2012
    An overcrowded Indian flyover was removed in record time using specialist demolition equipment, as Patrick Smith reports Demolition of the landmark Lalbaug flyover south of central Mumbai has been completed and work on a new bigger bridge has started in India's largest city. Although the 38-year-old Sant Dnyaneshwar (Lalbaug flyover) two-lane, one-way traffic artery was serviceable and used by to 15,000 vehicles/hour, there were daily traffic jams and environmental consequences. Despite the complex and dema