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

  • India’s capital highway project will improve transport connections
    October 10, 2017
    Huge numbers of construction machines as well as plant and equipment are working overtime, backed by mammoth manpower, to meet the targeted completion deadline of March 2018 for India’s Eastern Peripheral Expressway (EPE). The 135km arterial route is being built with six lanes and surrounds India’s National Capital, Delhi, its National Capital Region (NCR) and the industrially developed North Indian states of Haryana and Uttar Pradesh.
  • Hitachi upgrades European mini excavator facility
    July 19, 2018
    Hitachi Construction Machinery (Europe) NV (HCME) has upgraded its European mini excavator factory to boost manufacturing efficiency. The firm has officially opened its mini and compact excavator factory at Oosterhout, in the Netherlands. The new 8,000m2 facility is the result of an extensive modernisation programme, which commenced in January 2018. The firm says that the upgrade will increase efficiency at the factory that is responsible for producing the ZX10 to ZX85 models. It will also meet the growing
  • LiuGong launches world’s first intelligent wheeled loader shovelling system
    May 20, 2019
    LiuGong has unveiled the firm’s first-ever intelligent remote-controlled shovel wheeled loader. The 886H is said by the Chinese global construction, quarrying and mining equipment giant to be a combination of intelligent remote control and intelligent technology. The model’s intelligent wheeled loader shovelling system senses material penetration; has one bottom loading and dumping; along with bucket auto levelling and controllable placement of the bucket. Intelligent shovelling enables the machine to
  • Bomag’s president Ralf Junker puts his faith in BIM
    November 8, 2017
    World Highways recently caught up with Ralf Junker, president of BOMAG Group, during the company’s Innovation Days at its headquarters in Germany. David Arminas reports. Ralf Junker hasn’t forgotten his roots. You can put as much machine control as you like on a piece of construction equipment but all that high-technology is for nothing if the build quality isn’t there. Junker knows something about build quality. When he started at BOMAG in 1988, he was in the welding shop, eventually becoming supervisor