Skip to main content

Triple showing for CAMS

CAMS, the Italian company specialising in fixed and mobile systems for crushing, screening and shredding, showcased at the recent bauma 2025 the brand-new Centauro 75.25 - the smallest model in the Centauro range.
July 14, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Triple showing for CAMS

Just like its larger siblings, the Centauro 75.25 is versatile and environmentally friendly. It integrates a shredder, screen and magnetic separator in a single mobile unit designed for on-site operation. It can process challenging or wet materials, is remotely operated via radio control and can be powered by either a hybrid (diesel/electric) or fully electric system.

This specific model features an FPT F36 Stage V diesel engine (105kW) and a MeccAlte alternator (165kVA). As with the rest of the Centauro range, it is compatible with renewable-energy sources, including solar power. It also sports its own distinctive logo, designed by street artist and illustrator burla22. This original artwork expresses the machine’s personality, moving away from standard industrial design to embrace a new style of product communication.

But burla22’s vision extends beyond the equipment itself; it illustrates CAMS’ philosophy, embodied by “The Future is Green”. His dreamlike artwork imagines a world where inert-waste recycling is widespread, raw materials are used more sustainably and nature is reclaimed.

Also exhibited was the Centauro XL 150.69 APR, displayed in a custom livery for a Belgian client. The ‘APR’ stands for Asphalt Pavement Recycler – a reference to its ability to recover 100% of asphalt (milled material and slabs) while preserving the original bitumen content.

Compared to the standard Centauro designed for non-asphalt materials, the APR version features a secondary shredder operating at low speed to disaggregate the material without altering the particle-size distribution. This enables optimal separation of bitumen from aggregates and results in a cleaner, more classifiable end product. High-speed shredders, on the other hand, generate excess filler that can clog filters and reduce material quality.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Samoter-Asphaltica 2014 sparks greater Italian optimism
    July 3, 2014
    The recent co-located Samoter and Asphaltica exhibitions at VeronaFiere in Verona, Italy, have been hailed a success by organisers, exhibiting companies and trade delegations, after more than 40,000 visitors, including thousands from outside Italy, attended the combined 445 exhibitor company-strong four-day events. There is no doubt, as Guy Woodford reports, they provided a timely boost to an Italian construction equipment manufacturing sector enduring tough times
  • The elixir ReLIXIR from Sripath Technologies
    February 22, 2022
    ReLIXIR rejuvenator is a low-viscosity, free-flowing blend of bio-based oils that can easily be pumped from tote or bulk tank into the bitumen tank, injected into the bitumen feed line to a drum or batch plant or directly onto RAP particles on a conveyor.
  • Ammann is helping boost RAP use in China
    December 19, 2017
    The use of a new Ammann plant is helping to improve RAP usage in China with the manufacturer and the Chinese Government working together to gather and evaluate production data. A key Ammann customer in China is helping pave the way for the expanded use of recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) in the country’s road projects. Tianjin TianHeJianLing Road & Bridge Engineering Technology is a pioneer in the use of RAP in China. The mixes its Ammann ABA UniBatch and Uniglobe asphalt plants produce are being scrutinised
  • Wirtgen Group machines delivering new runway for German airbase
    October 26, 2016
    Machines from the Wirtgen Group are carrying out an important reconstruction job for the surface course at Büchel Air Base. Road machinery from Hamm, Vögele and Wirtgen as well as asphalt plants from Benninghoven have been carrying out the work, delivering a new runway within a tight timeframe. To achieve this, the work had to be planned well in advance, with the contractors organising the logistics and their personnel accordingly.