Skip to main content

Four more Jetpatcher units for Mexico

The Jetpatcher kits include all the proprietary control systems as well as the company’s Spreader Box attachment for localised sheet patching applications.
By David Arminas September 13, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
Ready for work south of the Rio Grande (image courtesy Jetpatcher)

UK-based Jetpatcher reports that it has just shipped four more Jetpatcher kits to their partners in Mexico, making a total 110 shipped to date.

The kits include all the proprietary control systems as well as the company’s ‘Spreader Box’ attachment for localised sheet patching applications. The units are made entirely in Jetpatcher’s new factory in Rugby, northern England. The company says that its heavy investment in laser technology, fabrication and self-sufficient energy from a huge solar bank ensures a smoother, faster and greener process all round.

Jetpatcher offer a range of machines in various size from 1m2 up to 8m2 that can be operated from trailers or 7.5tonne vehicles all the way up to a 26tonne chassis.

Jetpatcher Mexico is one of the company’s several global, strategic manufacturing hubs, along with ones in India, South Africa and Europe. The company says that because the hubs are run by local people, with all their expertise and knowledge of the area’s specific needs, they can react faster when called upon for the perfect solution.

Most of the equipment has been sold to municipal and state governments, explains Saúl  Arauzo, managing director and owner of Jetpatcher Mexico.  “There are government entities that have up to six Jetpatchers in operation. However, great interest has also been shown by private sector companies, some with up to 12 Jetpatcher units for the maintenance of asphalt roads.”  

Jetpatcher’s first units for Mexico arrived in the country for demonstrations and work in 2001 followed in 2002 by the first maintenance contract for municipal roads. The next year, 2003, saw official registration of the company Jetpatcher Mexico and the sale of the first five units.

Jetpatcher machines use high velocity air to prepare the area of the defect and to deliver emulsion and aggregate to seal, fill and compact the repair. The company says that this results in a quality repair that takes very little time, avoids further damage to the road base and is more economical than conventional repairs.

Jetpatcher also says that its units are the only machinery that uses a specialised distributor system which allows it to provide high production rates with little wear, as there are no moving parts. This eliminates costly maintenance time for the for the operators.

Since 1987 when the first Jetpatcher unit was built in New Zealand by Jim Turnbull, more than 650 units have been sold worldwide. The company was purchased by its UK distributor in 2016 and now has its global headquarters in Rugby, England.

The company says that it was instrumental in the creation of the UK’s BS 10947 standard which states that spray injection patching is suitable for several treatments. These include emergency and temporary patching repairs, pre-patching for surface dressing and slurry surfacing,  localised preventative maintenance and also permanent patching repairs.

Spray injection patching is suitable for local and strategic roads, hard shoulders, motorways (temporary but can be permanent where located out the wheel path) and hard running untrafficked strips.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Mixing recycled and fresh asphalt reduces costs
    February 14, 2012
    An innovative asphalt plant is allowing the use of recycled materials and achieving major cost benefits - Mike Woof reports. UK construction firm FM Conway is seeing the benefit of the €11.5 million (£10 million) it has invested in its asphalt production facilities at Erith in Kent, close to UK capital London, since buying the site in 2005. The biggest single investment in the facility has been a new Benninghoven asphalt plant, which was commissioned in June 2010 and is now the core of the Erith operation.
  • Increased performance from hand-operated compaction machines
    March 14, 2012
    Compact compaction units are delivering increased performance – Mike Woof reports. Competition is tough in the market for non-ride-on compaction units, with two manufacturers now introducing revamped models. Both JCB and Wacker Neuson aim to claim a larger section of the market with their latest designs, compaction plates and remote-controlled trench rollers respectively.
  • Increased performance from hand-operated compaction machines
    April 13, 2012
    Compact compaction units are delivering increased performance – Mike Woof reports. Competition is tough in the market for non-ride-on compaction units, with two manufacturers now introducing revamped models. Both JCB and Wacker Neuson aim to claim a larger section of the market with their latest designs, compaction plates and remote-controlled trench rollers respectively.
  • Sunderland’s New Wear Crossing takes shape
    February 16, 2017
    The New Wear Crossing will be the first bridge to be built over the River Wear in Sunderland, UK, for more than 40 years Raising the bridge’s 100m-tall pylon promised to be a stunning visual sight, but also a tricky operation dictated by extremely variable local weather. World Highways went to press just before the operation, but not before the pylon had arrived by barge on January 7. It had completed a two-day crossing of the often unpredictable North Sea from the Belgian port of Ghent where it was f