Skip to main content

Volvo’s 75 tonne EC750E excavator makes Eastern European debut

Polish cement company Cementownia Warta has taken delivery of a Volvo EC750E excavator, the first delivery to Eastern Europe, according to the manufacturer. The EC750E crawler model is working at Cementownia Warta’s limestone operations, said Dariusz Gawlak, managing director of Warta and vice president of the Polish Cement Association. Gawlak expects more infrastructure projects coming on stream next year, signalling a general rise in demand for cement.
December 18, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Volvo's EC750E at Cementownia Warta’s limestone operations in Poland
Polish cement company Cementownia Warta has taken delivery of a Volvo EC750E excavator, the first delivery to Eastern Europe, according to the manufacturer.


The EC750E crawler model is working at Cementownia Warta’s limestone operations, said Dariusz Gawlak, managing director of Warta and vice president of the Polish Cement Association. Gawlak expects more infrastructure projects coming on stream next year, signalling a general rise in demand for cement.

Quarry working is hard on machines and personnel, he said, especially during the winter months, when the mercury can drop to sub-zero temperatures. “Machine availability is the key issue,” says Gawlak. The key to mining limescale is the right equipment and 7659 Volvo Construction Equipment is meeting Warta’s demand by supplying a 2394 Volvo EC750E crawler excavator – a first for the company and region, he noted.

The company bought its first machine in 2008 – an L120F wheeled loader, which is still working in the quarries. Before the 75tonne crawler excavator had been unveiled at Germany’s bauma exhibition in Munich in April 2016, Warta had already put in an order.

Over the past nine years, Warta’s fleet has expanded to include 20 Volvo machines: four crawler excavators (EC700B, EC700C, EC290C and now the EC750E), five wheeled loaders (L350F, L220F, L120F and L120G) and 11 of Volvo’s 40tonne articulated haulers (models A40E and A40G).

The EC750E offers electro-hydraulic technology, optimised to operate in harmony with the robust engine, providing greater operator control and productivity. The model’s cab delivers a low-noise operator environment Warta was looking for. Ergonomically positioned interfaces – including the joysticks, keypad and LCD monitor – and clear all-around visibility.

“It’s also compatible with our Volvo A40E haulers,” he said. “When fitted with articulated hauler side extensions on the hauler body, it gives 15% more hauled material with the same fuel consumption.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • 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.
  • Accurate weigh-in-motion technology
    June 21, 2016
    Weigh-in-motion technology is ensuring increasingly accurate, and flexible, weighing stations. Weigh-in-motion specialist manufacturer Axtec says that its space-saving dynamic weighbridge is accurate to within ±0.5% and is the most precise system in the world. From its Runcorn, UK manufacturing facility, Axtec undertakes research and development of new technologies, as well as software testing, fabrication, construction and installation of WIM products. Axtec’s axle weighing platform design is intended f
  • Rock Hawg shows cutting edge
    February 28, 2012
    A new machine described as an excavator, trencher and crusher is the first of its type operating in the UK and Europe. Westquay Trading, the exclusive distributors for Tesmec products, has introduced the first 126tonne Rock Hawg, which has been sold to contractor A J Gammond of Malvern, England, pioneers of the use of the machines in the UK and Ireland.
  • Ammann is helping boost RAP use in China
    December 19, 2017
    The use of a new Ammann plant is helping to improve RAP usage in China with the manufacturer and the Chinese Government working together to gather and evaluate production data. A key Ammann customer in China is helping pave the way for the expanded use of recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) in the country’s road projects. Tianjin TianHeJianLing Road & Bridge Engineering Technology is a pioneer in the use of RAP in China. The mixes its Ammann ABA UniBatch and Uniglobe asphalt plants produce are being scrutinised