Skip to main content

Firm Grip: Liebherr, Leica and Steelwrist

The Leica Co-Pilot system controlling the Steelwrist X32 tiltrotator makes the job that little bit quicker and more accurate.
By David Arminas March 11, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Winning combination: the Leibherr R 934 G8 crawler fitted with GPS guidance from Leica Geosystems and with a Steelwrist X32 tiltrotator attachment

The first Liebherr excavator in the world with a factory-fitted Leica machine control system has gone into service with a UK civil engineering contractor.

An R 934 G8 crawler, the first to leave the factory in France since Liebherr and Leica Geosystems joined forces last year, has been added to the fleet at Brad-Pave. It is equipped with the Leica 3D passive system soon to be updated to include automatic inclination/rotation function.

Brad-Pave - which employs only four people and is based in England - specialises in road construction, deep drainage and earthmoving.

The machine arrived in the UK towards the end of last year with an operating weight of almost 38.5 tonnes. But soon after, a Steelwrist X32 tiltrotator on 80mm pins was added, taking the total package to just over 40 tonnes.

“We’ve used GPS guidance for a number of years and having the opportunity to have an integrated system on a Liebherr excavator was an ideal scenario for us,” said Paul Bradshaw, director of Brad-Pave.

“We are hoping that one of the benefits of taking this option will be the increased reliability of a built-in system. Not only does it do away with the requirement for traditional setting-out but it is almost 100% fool-proof. The addition of the Leica Co-Pilot system controlling the Steelwrist will just make any project that little bit quicker and more accurate,” said Bradshaw.

The partnership between Liebherr and Leica Geosystems enables customers to buy generation 6 and 8 crawler and wheeled excavators with 2D or 3D control systems as an option.

Leica Geosystems, part of the Hexagon Group, supplies of sensors, software and services for surveying, construction, infrastructure, mining, mapping and other geospatial content-dependent industries.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Komatsu’s powerful PC900LC-11 excavator increases productivity by 40%
    March 16, 2023
    Komatsu’s powerful new PC900LC-11 excavator stands tall among the company’s other mining and quarrying products.
  • PPRS event highlights transport investment shortfall
    April 30, 2015
    The PPRS event in Paris highlighted the need for additional investment in road transportation – David Arminas writes. Consider the global road network. An improved road from one rural African town to another can reduce the journey time from a one-day walk to a one-hour drive. This could save lives through access to a hospital; allow small businesses to work faster by getting in supplies more quickly; allow children to attend a better equipped school. Roads affect society by allowing healthier and bett
  • Premiere in the Black Forest
    October 5, 2023
    One of the steepest sections of the B 500, an important road in the southern Black Forest, had to be renewed in the summer of 2023 – more precisely: the first kilometres behind the Triberg town sign, past the famous waterfalls. Asphalt paving specialists from Gebrüder Bantle GmbH & Co. KG were commissioned to resurface the carriageway.
  • New integration with Carlson Machine Control and Atlas Copco’s FlexiROC with HEC3 Drills
    January 6, 2017
    Installation and testing has been completed at the Atlas Copco factory in Örebro, Sweden, on the first system integration of Carlson Machine Control’s CBx5 control box console running Carlson DrillGrade software on a FlexiROC HEC3 C65 drilling system. This is said to mark the first successful factory installation of a 3D drilling system integrating Atlas Copco’s new third party protocol available on FlexiROC drills with the HEC3 system. The first of several systems has been delivered to a mine in Finland an