Skip to main content

Dressta works on next two generation crawler dozers

Dressta, the Poland-based LiuGong subsidiary, is developing its next generation of dozer crawlers, the first of which will be potentially available to customers sometime in 2016. Speaking at a recent Dressta press event at the firm’s HQ and factory in Stalowa Wola, southern Poland, David Beatenbough, LiuGong’s vice president, said: “We’ve got major work going on our next generation crawler dozer. It’s a global project. We have a team of Chinese [LiuGong] engineers who are paired off with a Polish [Dressta]
December 20, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
The Dressta dozer range is highly developed and can trace its lineage back to early mechanised machines
Dressta, the Poland-based LiuGong subsidiary, is developing its next generation of dozer crawlers, the first of which will be potentially available to customers sometime in 2016.

Speaking at a recent 3420 Dressta press event at the firm’s HQ and factory in Stalowa Wola, southern Poland, David Beatenbough, 269 LiuGong’s vice president, said: “We’ve got major work going on our next generation crawler dozer. It’s a global project. We have a team of Chinese [LiuGong] engineers who are paired off with a Polish [Dressta] engineer, with each paired team working on a different part of the project. That team work involving around 30 engineers working in pairs will continue for around the next three years. The next generation machines will be global - for all Tier emission models.”

Beatenbough said the work on the next generation of dozer crawlers was the first time that LiuGong Chinese and Dressta Polish engineers had worked together on one machine development project.

“It’s really fun to watch it come together,” said Beatenbough. “The strengths and skills of the Polish engineers are very different from the strengths of the Chinese engineers. The Polish engineers have lots of experience and lots of confidence. The Chinese engineers have lots of energy and are willing to try anything.”

Prior to the start of the joint Polish-Chinese engineer development work on the new crawler dozers, LiuGong’s Chinese engineers spent a lot of time visiting and learning from the market. “Had we not done that pre-work, we would not have been able to have a successful China team here [at Stalowa Wola],” said Beatenbough. “We wanted to get people to understand that an idea they come up with might actually be pretty good.”

Citing an example of how the Chinese-Polish engineering teams had progressed, Beatenbough added, “It was really nice the other day. A small issue came up [with the new generation crawler dozers] and there were 10 engineers in one room with a great big whiteboard, standing around discussing the issue from all points of view. It was a really nice detailed discussion. In the end everybody agreed, everybody compromised.”

The latest crawler dozer range consists of 21 models – ranging from the 40tonne TD-40E Extra to the 7tonne TD7R and the TD-7R LT.

Talking about his favourite models of the current Dressta crawler dozer range, Beatenbough said, “The TD-40 really is a star. We’ve got lots of them all over the world. The repurchase percentage on the TD-40 is incredibly high. Customers say the machine feels right.

“The other [favourite machine] is the TD-15. For any really good construction machine it’s not about which components you put in, it’s about how good a job you do integrating those components. Again, the TD-15 feels right.”

Beatenbough said both Dressta and LiuGong’s key focus over the next 12 months will be on meeting the January and October 2014 deadlines for Tier 4 emission standard machines.

He also confirmed that said the 922E and 925E excavators – part of the E Series of LiuGong 10 to 50tonne excavators launched earlier this year – are being made at Stalowa Wola.

Of the development of the LiuGong brand within markets outside China, Beatenbough added, “The brand’s recognition is definitely increasing. When I hand someone in the industry my business card with LiuGong on it they say ‘Oh, I know LiuGong’.”

He also believes that LiuGong’s joint ventures with 196 Cummins and ZF have supported growing brand recognition. “On a secondary level, it helps quite a bit. People understand that Cummins and ZF have looked at our company and seen our quality. We’re always interested in JVs, but they’ve got to fit our business Plan.”

Speaking later during a Q&A session with trade press at Dressta’s HQ, Beatenbough also stressed the importance of developing Dressta’s brand recognition. “The first international harvester bulldozers were built in the 1930s, and our [Dressta’s] history goes back to that. The technology that we use in our current [bulldozer] machine also has elements that go all the way back to that. But, in the past years, through many of the changes in HSW, and as LiuGong has acquired the company, many people have forgotten who Dressta is. For me, the most critical thing is to get our heritage, our quality and our machines well-known again so people can remember our strengths.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • RUBBLE MASTER extends Chinese presence
    November 28, 2018
    Austrian global compact crusher manufacturer RUBBLE MASTER is benefiting from a growing dealership presence in the Chinese market – with 11 local sales partners signed up in just one year. The latest local sales partner, based in Beijing, has been recruited this week by RUBBLE MASTER’s five-employee strong, Tianjin-based sales subsidiary, Tianjin RUBBLE MASTER Technology. RUBBLE MASTER’s sales reach now stretches from Jilin in China’s north-east, to Guangdong in the south, and as far west as Sichuan. The
  • Advances in US paving machines and material feeders
    May 30, 2013
    Paving machines vary considerably in North America compared with those units used elsewhere. On a worldwide basis, pavers with tamper bar screeds are popular having been developed in Europe and also favoured by Japanese and Chinese firms. But in the US the length of highways to be constructed resulted in a focus on high production pavers, which still continues today. North America and Latin America are key markets for these machines, with Australia being one of the few territories to employ both European an
  • Putting roller compacted concrete to the test
    June 28, 2013
    Although it has been around since the 1970s, roller compacted concrete (RCC) is starting to look a whole lot more attractive, thanks to the rising price of bitumen. Now the challenge is to define specifications and tests to help ensure quality - Kristina Smith reports. At a meeting of the American Concrete Pavement Association in December 2011, there was a sea-change in the attitude towards roller compacted concrete (RCC). Up until that point, the feeling among the 400-plus members, of which half are contra
  • Terex Trucks have big future ambitions after Volvo CE investment
    January 6, 2017
    Terex Trucks is set to benefit significantly from new thinking and investment in its production processes, dealership networks, and customer support capability. The Motherwell, Scotland-headquartered articulated and rigid truck manufacturer has been “refreshed” by its €123.5 million acquisition last year by Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE), according to new Terex Trucks global sales and marketing director Sam Wyant. Wyant said: “We’ve had audits by the Volvo Group on our factories to see what we ca