Skip to main content

Volvo CE machines quarrying tough conditions

A quarry producer in Iceland is now benefiting from new technology from Volvo CE. The firm is quarrying volcanic basalt at a site not far from Iceland’s capital, Reykjavik. Located around 10km to the south of Reykjavik, just outside the small town of Hafnarfjörður, is a large open quarry called Vatnsskarðsnámur. The quarry is owned by Alexander Ólafsson, a contracting company that specialises in crushing and screening.
September 14, 2017 Read time: 2 mins

A quarry producer in Iceland is now benefiting from new technology from Volvo CE. The firm is quarrying volcanic basalt at a site not far from Iceland’s capital, Reykjavik. Located around 10km to the south of Reykjavik, just outside the small town of Hafnarfjörður, is a large open quarry called Vatnsskarðsnámur.

The quarry is owned by Alexander Ólafsson, a contracting company that specialises in crushing and screening. The firm extracts basalt for use in general construction, as well as producing aggregates for use in concrete. The firm crushes, screens and cleans the material, which is then used for a variety of applications across the country, such as road building and civil construction. Around 150 truckloads of material is extracted from the quarry/day, equating to about a million tonnes/year.

The bulk of the heavy duty work is carried out by a fleet of Volvo L180 wheeled loaders, which work around the clock to keep up with the growing demand. The firm has one L180E, one L180F and four new L180Hs, including one bought this year. In addition the firm has other Volvo CE loaders in its fleet, an L90H and an older L180E, which are used its smaller quarries elsewhere in Iceland, having used machines from the manufacturer since the business was established in the early 1980s.

The L180H’s specifications, bucket capacity, static tipping load, reach height and operating weight, suit the firm’s needs at the Vatnsskarðsnámur facility. Another key feature is the sophisticated OptiShift system, which reduces fuel consumption by up to 18% and increases machine performance. The Volvo CE machines also cope well with the climate, which can be extremely cold in winter. Meanwhile low internal noise levels and vibration protection increase the chances of a productive work shift. The cab also incorporates a single lever control for ease of operation.

Related Content

  • Volvo CE machines in Texas quarrying
    August 19, 2015
    A fleet of machines from Volvo Construction equipment is helping boost production at a quarry company in Texas. Family firm Conners Crushed Stone is using its Volvo CE fleet to help quarry and crush high-quality limestone at five quarries in Texas, USA. Although best known for its oil fields, the state’s natural resources also include extensive limestone deposits. Veins of limestone run throughout the state, from the heights of the state’s Big Bend Mountains all the way down to the Rio Grande on the bor
  • Volvo CE machines in Indonesia quarry
    November 20, 2015
    The operation is now using one of the EC220DL excavator models, which has helped boost productivity by some 30%. In addition, the machine is said to be delivering savings in running costs at the Alam Jaya volcanic rock quarry, through reducing fuel consumption by two litres/hour. The site is located close to West Java’s capital city, Bandung, at the foot of the volcano, Tangkuban Perahu. The city is home to 2.5 million people and sits at 768m above sea level, while it benefits from one of Indonesia’s coo
  • Volvo CE’s electric quarry operation commences trials
    August 29, 2018
    Volvo CE is commencing operations of its low emission quarrying operation in Sweden. The facility has a strong focus on electric machines, with diesel-electric hybrid equipment also being used. According to the firm, this is a world first for a quarry facility that can be run almost 'emission-free'. Volvo CE and its customer Skanska have now commenced testing the viability of the Electric Site concept at Skanska’s Vikan Kross quarry, located near Gothenburg in Sweden. The production system at the site
  • Saudi Arabia limestone production boost
    October 23, 2017
    Saudi Dolomite runs a processing plant in Abqaiq, which is located in the desert, 80km south-west of the capital of the eastern province of Saudi Arabia, Damman. Covering an area of 250,000m², the plant processes 5,000tonnes of material/day and runs its around-the-clock operation seven days/week.