Skip to main content

Volvo CE machines in Texas quarrying

A fleet of machines from Volvo Construction equipment is helping boost production at a quarry company in Texas. Family firm Conners Crushed Stone is using its Volvo CE fleet to help quarry and crush high-quality limestone at five quarries in Texas, USA. Although best known for its oil fields, the state’s natural resources also include extensive limestone deposits. Veins of limestone run throughout the state, from the heights of the state’s Big Bend Mountains all the way down to the Rio Grande on the bor
August 19, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Machines from Volvo CE are helping production for a quarry firm in Texas
A fleet of machines from 7659 Volvo Construction equipment is helping boost production for a quarry company in Texas. Family firm Conners Crushed Stone is using its Volvo CE fleet to help quarry and crush high-quality limestone at five quarries in Texas, USA.

Although best known for its oil fields, the state’s natural resources also include extensive limestone deposits. Veins of limestone run throughout the state, from the heights of the state’s Big Bend Mountains all the way down to the Rio Grande on the border of Mexico. It is this stone that Conners Crushed Stone transforms into high-quality aggregate. The family-owned, multi-quarry firm is located near the small town of Lott, 40km south of Waco.

The company has been quarrying and crushing limestone for more than 25 years and its five quarries rely on a range of Volvo CE machines.

The quarry in Oglesby produces a limestone mix from a rare deposit that is high in calcium carbonate and low in iron and magnesium. The 141.6ha quarry produces five types of limestone in a range of sizes – a hefty burden easily handled by a fleet of four Volvo CE wheel loaders. A Volvo L250G, L180G and two L180Es work together to keep up with the high demand for Conners’s product, transporting quarried limestone to a crusher that is working at maximum capacity. Further down the road, at Conners’s 178ha quarry in Reagan, four more Volvo CE machines are being put to work. The L220E, L220D, L180D and a new L220G are moving aggregate from the face to load into the jaw crusher. They are also being used to load crushed material into delivery trucks.

The aggregate produced by Conners is sold mainly as hauling stone for oil pad bases. The company also works closely with the 3499 Texas Department of Transportation, providing stone for a US$4.8 million multi-phase highway improvement project in the state.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Quarry producer
    February 20, 2012
    A powerful Hitachi excavator is being used to maximise efficiency and simplify the extraction process at a Polish limestone quarry. The operation is owned by Cementownia Warta and since it purchased its EX1200-6, annual production in the Dzialoszyn limestone quarry has risen to 2.5 million tonnes.
  • Boom in Morocco's road construction materials
    February 10, 2012
    The strong road construction market in Morocco is helping boost the quarrying market in the country substantially. One such operation exists near the town of Ben Slimane, situated north of Casablanca. Agregat Oued Cherrat (AOC) owns a 65ha quarry, one of the largest of the 14 in the region and when the firm decided to buy new excavators, it also opted to buy Hitachi machines. AOC placed an order for one ZX330-3, with the second delivered three months later and the company now has three ZX330-3s, with a four
  • Volvo’s 75 tonne EC750E excavator makes Eastern European debut
    December 18, 2017
    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.
  • Australia’s new airport in Queensland
    August 18, 2015
    The first new airport constructed in Australia for 45 years is now open for business. The Brisbane West Wellcamp Airport in Queensland is located 17km to the west of Toowomba. The facility was completed at the end of last year by Wagners, an Australian family-owned construction company. Toowoomba lies in the Darling Downs region of Queensland, located 126km west of Queensland’s capital city, Brisbane. Toowoomba’s population of approximately 165,000 makes it Australia’s second-most populous inland city. T