Skip to main content

Efficient road repairs from Simex

By Mike Woof April 25, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Simex says that its ART1000 offers fast and efficient road repairs

The new ART1000 unit from Simex offers fast and effective road repairs. The unit is suited to use on urban roads and offers a cost-effective solution for repairs and maintenance works.

The Italian firm is best known for its attachments for compact machines and this new unit is designed for use on a high performance skid steer loader with high flow hydraulics but it is rather more sophisticated than a simple milling unit.

Alessandro Ferrin from the firm commented, “It’s the most advanced attachment we have and we spent five or six years developing it. This is not a common milling attachment you fit to a skid steer.”

He said that the unit offers users the option of cold-in-place recycling allowing speedy, low cost road repairs. Additional training is required for the machine operator though to ensure that repair works are carried out properly. Apart from the skid steer carrying the attachment, the only other pieces of equipment required is a small twin drum compactor.

The milling drum at the front of the unit breaks out the old surface, with a second revolving cutter then reducing the material to the 0-15mm size. Ferrin said, “’Everything is controlled by the system that maintains a constant percentage of additive.” The unit is patented, with a special system that ensures the exact quantities of additives are used no matter the speed or depth of cut.

The unit can be used for repairing local roads quickly and as almost all of the material is from the surface, with only a small percentage of additives, it reduces the cost of carrying the work. Repairs can also be carried out repeatedly on the same stretch of road. Ferrin said, “It’s very important for us for the US market,” although he said that the unit will also be of benefit for the European market given its ability to repair roads quickly and cheaply.

The machine has a working width of 1m and can cut to a maximum depth of 100mm, although Ferrin said that in use, 30-70mm is more typical. Ferrin added, “We are working on smaller and larger versions,” although he said that these will only be ready for market in two to three years.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bitumen technology: counting carbon emissions from road works
    March 13, 2024
    This month we look at accurate carbon counting, a biobinder that does not come at a premium and efforts to increase recycled content - Kristina Smith reports
  • FM Conway and TfL set “benchmark” for RAP use in A40 project
    November 30, 2017
    Infrastructure services company FM Conway and the UK’s Transport for London (TfL) have set “a new benchmark” for recycling in the highways industry.
  • Hamm’s crushing option
    January 6, 2017
    Hamm is now offering a novel crusher drum option for its soil compactors. This innovative feature transforms a soil compactor into a machine suitable for road recycling applications. Hamm’s marketing director, Gottfried Beer, explained that this special drum broadens the versatility of the standard soil compactor and allows contractors with existing machines to carry out additional types of work. While soil compactors have been fitted with crusher drums before, these have been comparatively limited in the r
  • Hamm’s crushing option
    April 18, 2013
    Hamm is now offering a novel crusher drum option for its soil compactors. This innovative feature transforms a soil compactor into a machine suitable for road recycling applications. Hamm’s marketing director, Gottfried Beer, explained that this special drum broadens the versatility of the standard soil compactor and allows contractors with existing machines to carry out additional types of work. While soil compactors have been fitted with crusher drums before, these have been comparatively limited in the r