Skip to main content

Low-entry Mercedes-Benz Econic has high visibility

Mercedes-Benz says that it’s low-entry Econic truck has been awarded the maximum safety-specific five-star Direct Vision rating by Transport for London. Utilities contractor Ferns Surfacing has just invested in a pair of 32tonne Mercedes-Benz Econic trucks decked out as tipper-grabs and is operating them on surface reinstatement and resurfacing duties in and around London. Ferns has 10 depots across south-east England and East Anglia, north-east of London. With its deep, panoramic windscreen and full-heig
June 4, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
Eyeballing it: drivers of a Mercedes-Benz Econic can make direct eye contact with cyclists, motorcyclists and pedestrians
Mercedes-Benz says that it’s low-entry Econic truck has been awarded the maximum safety-specific five-star Direct Vision rating by Transport for London.


Utilities contractor Ferns Surfacing has just invested in a pair of 32tonne 1195 Mercedes-Benz Econic trucks decked out as tipper-grabs and is operating them on surface reinstatement and resurfacing duties in and around London. Ferns has 10 depots across south-east England and East Anglia, north-east of London.

With its deep, panoramic windscreen and full-height, glazed passenger door, the cab provides drivers with an unrivalled view - particularly beneficial in heavily congested areas such as many parts of London. Drivers can make direct eye contact with cyclists, motorcyclists and pedestrians, a feature which also contributes to safety, especially at junctions.

Both of the Ferns vehicles are Econic 3235L ENA models with single front steer axles, double-drive bogies and rear-steer axles to ensure a high degree of manoeuvrability. Power is provided by fuel-efficient, 7.7litre six-cylinder engines which produce 260kW and are paired with six-speed Allison automatic gearboxes. The trucks’ steel tipping bodies are by Thompson, while their Epsilon M125L cranes have clamshell buckets and offer a maximum outreach of 8.2m.

The Econics are based at Ferns Surfacing’s depot in Wembley, north-west London. Both are fitted with audible left-turn alarms and all-round CCTV systems that assist drivers by providing images of both sides and the rear of the vehicle. Footage is recorded onto a remotely accessible hard drive.

“Drivers found that in congested areas the experience at the wheel is a lot less stressful as a result of the enhanced visibility,” explained James Gupwell, transport director at Ferns. “We can also send a crew of up to four, including the driver, in an Econic. They’ll climb in and out multiple times a day and report that the truck’s low height, easy cross-cab access and full air suspension makes the job more comfortable.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Atlas weycor wheel loader AR 250e weighs in the 2.5m³ class
    March 4, 2016
    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
  • 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
  • Borum draws the line with its self-propelled BM 2500
    May 15, 2018
    The Borum Master 2500 is the latest member of Borum’s range of self-propelled line-marking machines designed for flexible working. The BM 2500 has a one-seat drive-and-operator section that is slideable for flexible working on the left or right side. From city areas to urban and interurban roads, the Borum Master 2500 can handle both smaller jobs and longer road stretches. It allows for thermoplastic capacities up to 350 litres, 2-component cold plastic or cold paint capacities of 440 litres and for t
  • Self-healing roads, slippery roads and slimmer roads
    November 24, 2017
    This month’s bitumen technology pages bring you self-healing roads, slippery roads and slimmer roads and explains why one UK contractor has started manufacturing its own polymer modified bitumen - Kristina Smith reports. Professor Erik Schlangen, who heads up experimental micromechanics at the Delft University of Technology is receiving calls from all round the world these days. And it is hardly surprising because he and his team have invented a great new technology: asphalt that heals itself.