Skip to main content

Power Curbers offers stringless control

Concrete slipformer manufacturer Power Curbers is now offering a stringless machine control option for its customers. Extensive tests have been carried out to ensure the system works efficiently and Power Curbers says that various customers are now using 5700-C machines that are equipped with networked digital controls on jobsites in the United States and Canada. According to the firm, the results have been good with contractors saving on set up time while achieving high accuracy when carrying kerb and gutt
November 15, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Power Curbers slipforms can use positioning technology from either Leica Geosystems or Topcon due to the Moba digital control
Concrete slipformer manufacturer 307 Power Curbers is now offering a stringless machine control option for its customers.

Extensive tests have been carried out to ensure the system works efficiently and Power Curbers says that various customers are now using 5700-C machines that are equipped with networked digital controls on jobsites in the United States and Canada. According to the firm, the results have been good with contractors saving on set up time while achieving high accuracy when carrying kerb and gutter jobs.

Power Curbers vice president, sales & marketing is Stephen Bullock and he said, “Though we’ve had the ability to control the machine with GPS and 3D systems for several years, we delayed the market release until we were convinced the accuracy could match stringline results and that curb and gutter subcontractors were ready to abandon the visual check that stringline provides. We are very pleased with the feedback we’ve gotten from our stringless customers.”

Power Curbers offers a novel approach to machine control as the MOBA digital control system now being used on the Power Curber 5700-C uses open architecture. This allows the system to interface with 3D or GPS controls from several different suppliers. Currently, Power Curbers customers are using both 265 Leica Geosystems and 342 Topcon technology for stringless control. “It was essential from day one to build a system that allowed the contractor to choose the system they were comfortable using. We want to maintain maximum flexibility for our customers,” added Bullock.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sangamo wins the winter battle with a Wirtgen Slipform Paver SP 15i
    January 19, 2016
    Winter was coming in the northern US state of Illinois and Sangamo Construction had to build 1.5km of bridge parapets just before the end of the construction season. Sangamo Construction was contracted to work on five bridges where some parapets needed to be 1m high x 48cm thick at the bottom, tapering to a width of just under 27cm at the top, and with a perpendicular rear wall. As much as 26m3 of concrete were processed just for the construction of the four 150m-long parapets on the twin bridges on Interst
  • Rolling out new and improved concrete pavers
    February 10, 2012
    Paver innovations The manufacturers are also rolling out several new and improved concrete paving models, with versatility and adaptability high on the agenda. GOMACO is now offering a novel independent IDBI attachment that allows dowel bar insertion behind a paver to form the transverse joint. The IDBI attachment is a new generation bar insertion system.
  • Power Curbers ramps up Florida projects
    September 5, 2022
    A Florida company is using Power Curbers machines for major runway work in the US state.
  • Commander shows versatility for GOMACO
    March 10, 2017
    GOMACO is offering a new solution for concrete slipforming at CONEXPO-CON/AGG 2017. The firm is increasing the versatility of its Commander III slipformer further with the development of the next generation machine and now offers it in three- as well as the original four-track configuration. The new three-track Commander IIIx has three tracks and can also be equipped with latest generation telematics technology.