Skip to main content

Emerald Isle favours Doosan

Kilsaran Concrete (KC) has purchased a new Doosan MT31 articulated dump truck (ADT) from Philip McCormack Plant Ltd for the company’s Gallstown Quarry in County Louth, Ireland. The Gallstown Quarry (GQ) was acquired in the early nineties as a greenfield site and has since been developed into a complete installation of crushing and screening, washing, blacktop, block making and readymix concrete facilities. Formerly branded Moxy before the range was acquired by Doosan in 2008, this line of trucks has been
November 8, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
6853 Kilsaran Concrete (KC) has purchased a new Doosan MT31 articulated dump truck (ADT) from Philip McCormack Plant Ltd for the company’s Gallstown Quarry in County Louth, Ireland.   

The Gallstown Quarry (GQ) was acquired in the early nineties as a greenfield site and has since been developed into a complete installation of crushing and screening, washing, blacktop, block making and readymix concrete facilities.
 
Formerly branded 1239 Moxy before the range was acquired by 695 Doosan in 2008, this line of trucks has been purchased by the Kilsaran Group, which KC is part of, since the early 1990s.

The first to be bought was the MT30 model in 1992, with the company having since purchased different generations of the MT31 model, with the latest machine at GQ being the third generation of the MT31 ADT. 

One of the main reasons for choosing the Doosan ADT range again is said by KG to be the reliability and dependability of the trucks over the last 20 years, backed by the three-year warranty covering the powerline and engine from Philip McCormack Plant (PMP), based in Clane, County Kildare. The trucks are also maintained under service contracts run by PMP, which is said to help ensure that KG receives a very good residual value for the Doosan trucks, even for those with well over 20,000 working hours.

Peter Ryan, location manager at GQ, said: “The trucks have been great performers over the years and I’m sure this will continue under the Doosan brand if the performance of the new MT31 ADT is anything to go by.”   
           
Founded by the late Patrick McKeown in 1964, the KG is a family-owned and run business and claims to be Ireland’s largest independent manufacturer of concrete products.

Ryan added: “Philip McCormack Plant is also a family-run business and we deal closely with both Philips, father and son, at the company, who offer us a very close, personal service that matches the way we like to do business.”

After commencing commercial rock extraction at GQ in 1995, KC has been carrying out regular onsite environmental monitoring of noise and dust.

The quarry is said by KC to be operated to the very highest environmental standards, with procedures, practices and policies adopted to minimise the impact of the quarry on all aspects of the local environment; this includes the implementation of a
self-imposed environmental management system.

GQ been honoured with a Five Star Award in the Irish Concrete Federation’s (ICF) biannual national Green Aggregates Award, an initiative promoting good environmental management practices and operational performance. Meanwhile, KC was presented with a Special Award for Outstanding Team Dedication in the Environmental Best Practice category of the European Aggregates Association (UEPG) Sustainable Development Awards.

The greywacke deposit at Gallstown is said to possesses significant attributes in terms of its quality and physical properties, including a high polished-stone value of 65 and low aggregate impact and aggregate abrasion values. The stone is said by KC to be used as construction material in a broad range of applications, including high quality surface dressings. It is also said to be suitable for use in all road surfacing projects including motorway construction.

GQ produces a range of aggregates, asphalt and macadam, hardcore and fill materials.  Ready-mixed concrete and concrete blocks are also manufactured on site in a modern plant utilising raw materials from the quarry.

Weighing in at 22.7tonnes, the MT31 ADT features what is said by Doosan to be a proven, powerful Scania DC9 engine providing a gross power output of 255 kW (347 HP) at 2,200rpm, a maximum 28tonne payload, central lubrication, a rear view camera and permanent six-wheel drive to ensure maximum stability and equal weight distribution.

Said to be ideal for quarry operations, Doosan ADTs are said by the firm to be designed for extreme off-road performance. According to Doosan, the presence of an exceptionally agile undercarriage ensures that its trucks can drive on terrain where other trucks may struggle to follow, and allows performance to be maintained on normal construction sites such as road works and mass excavation hauling.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Signify’s LEDs for Dublin tunnel
    August 1, 2023
    Lighting specialist Signify has equipped the 9km-long Dublin Port Tunnel in Ireland with energy efficient LED lighting for all the route’s 1,800 light points. The quality of lighting for drivers in the tunnel improved from CRI25 to CRI70
  • Rapid’s debut plant customer is first buyer of Transbatch
    September 26, 2013
    Norman Emerson & Sons, a leading Northern Irish supplier of construction materials that includes ready mixed concrete and quarry aggregates, is Rapid International’s first customer to take ownership of the new Rapid Transbatch compact mobile batching plant. The investment will modernise Norman Emerson & Sons existing ready-mix production facilities at the its site in Ardmore, County Armagh, and is replacing the first batching plant ever built by Rapid, purchased by Norman Emerson & Sons over 40 years ago
  • It’s Miller time for Doosan excavators and loaders in Scotland
    April 17, 2018
    Scottish Doosan dealer Balgownie has supplied new Doosan DX225LC-5 22tonne and DX255LC-5 25tonne excavators and a new DL420-5 wheeled loader to Miller Plant. Miller Plant offers services from bulk earthworks and contract crushing and screening to plant hire, site clearance, demolition, aggregate supply and heavy haulage and tipper hire. As the machines will do more than 60 hours a week each, they come with a peace-of-mind five-year warranty and Balgownie’s fast response to requests and service support.
  • Bitumen tech: innovation for decarbonisation
    June 4, 2024
    Kristina Smith examines four new products and processes, including bio-bitumen produced from algae, designed to lower the carbon footprint of asphalt mixes.