Skip to main content

Case CE creates single joystick excavator for injured operator

Case Construction Equipment dealer Dagenborg Maskin AS, from Tromso in Norway, has modified a Case CX250C crawler excavator to allow the machine to be operated using a single joystick. When operator Thomas Rostad lost much of his right hand in an accident, contractor KIME Maskinentreprenor Kare Isaksen AS, and in particular company owner Morten Willumsen, was very keen for Rostad to return to work, so had the machine rebuilt to meet his individual requirements. KIME was established in 1973 and carries out a
May 30, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Thomas Rostad at work on his single joystick operated Case CX250C crawler excavator
176 Case Construction Equipment dealer Dagenborg Maskin AS, from Tromso in Norway, has modified a Case CX250C crawler excavator to allow the machine to be operated using a single joystick.

When operator Thomas Rostad lost much of his right hand in an accident, contractor KIME Maskinentreprenor Kare Isaksen AS, and in particular company owner Morten Willumsen, was very keen for Rostad to return to work, so had the machine rebuilt to meet his individual requirements.

KIME was established in 1973 and carries out a variety of construction and civil engineering works throughout Norway. The company is involved in pipe and underwater excavation, road and pavement construction, house building and recycling. However, Rostad will be mainly involved in road building, which includes some pipe laying work.

To meet this need the machine is also supplied with a rototilt attachment that functions through buttons on the left hand servo lever, allowing fine shaping and grading works to be carried out. All C Series Case excavators use the Case Intelligent Hydraulic System, said to ensure the most efficient use of the engine and hydraulic system to boost productivity and increase control for the operator.

“The Case CX250C is a very good machine,” says Rostad. “Especially the sensitive hydraulics, which allow me total control of the bucket or attachment.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Atlas weycor wheel loader AR 250e weighs in the 2.5m³ class
    January 6, 2017
    Atlas, based in Wildeshausen in northwestern Germany, is extending the weycor series, in which other AR wheel loaders meet the TIER V ready exhaust gas regulation, in the direction of large high-performance loaders. The Deutz TCD 6.1 engine with DOC/DPF/SCR exhaust system has an output of 160kW at 2000rpm and complies with the TIER IV final exhaust gas regulations and even with the TIER V ready regulations, which are not likely to come into force until 2020. The maximum tipping load without hydraulic quic
  • New focus on hydraulics operations for Lonking
    January 6, 2017
    Lonking widening its product range and developing its hydraulics components operations - Mike Woof reports Shanghai-based Lonking is best known as a major supplier of wheeled loaders, and as one of the market leaders in China. The company has followed a path of diversification in recent years however, significantly widening its product range and with its excavator business in particular proving successful and taking a substantial share of the Chinese home market. Other Lonking products rolling off the produ
  • Get ready for winter road maintenance
    October 3, 2016
    The winter maintenance market heats up this summer. Bobcat has expanded its winter range of loaders with the addition of the S450 skid-steer and T450 compact tracked machines.
  • State of the art tunnel a conservation triumph
    May 2, 2012
    The opening of a 1.8km tunnel in southern England is designed to ease traffic bottlenecks in an environmentally sensitive area. Patrick Smith reports