Skip to main content

Dynapac launches new DRQ Series

July 1, 2021

Three years back, Dynapac launched a new range of light compaction equipment. The portfolio included rammers, plates and rollers. The reversible vibratory plate series - DRP - featured cast-iron base-plate and completely closed hood.

The reversible plate portfolio is set for expansion with addition of the new DRQ series. This series will feature HARDOX base plate and a cage-style protection hood construction. The entire portfolio would be launched in multiple phases starting with the Honda petrol or gasoline models, from July. Hatz diesel models would be added thereafter. Once complete, the models would range from 150kg (300lbs) to 500kg (1100lb).

Exhibitions

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • SaMoTer 2020 Preview: Jaw-dropping performance from Promove's XP series
    February 10, 2020
    Breaking up is easy to do with Promove's new 600kg XP600 and 200kg XP200 breakers
  • Brokk’s heavy duty breaker
    September 6, 2019
    Brokk is now offering its own line of hydraulic breakers. The new Brokk Hydraulic Breaker (BHB) series suits use with the company’s range of remote-controlled demolition robots. These are extra heavy-duty units that are said to offer high demolition performance. The BHB series includes eight breaker models, starting with the 50kg BHB 55 breaker for the compact Brokk 60 remote-controlled demolition machine. The range goes all the way up to the 700kg BHB 705 for the recently introduced Brokk 500 and Brokk 52
  • New demolition excavators
    April 29, 2025
    Extended reach excavators offers versatility for demolition works, with new models now available
  • Building Spain's highest viaduct
    July 9, 2012
    Amid a mountain wilderness, a new highway system rises, featuring Spain's highest viaduct For years, motorists and truck drivers in northern Spain have had to endure using a dangerous road liable to traffic hold-ups, delays and accidents, and frequently impassable in the depths of winter. In any event it is a slow and tortuous climb from Molledo on the Cantabrian lowlands up the N-611 road through the Cantabrian Mountains to Palencia, on the Meseta, Spain's high central plateau.