Skip to main content

SAE’s novel cold mix plant

By Mike Woof April 26, 2024 Read time: 1 min

Fayat subsidiary SAE is offering a novel cold mix system that is said to offer extra versatility for asphalt plants. The system is said to be adaptable for any plant installation, as long as there is sufficient room.

A spokesperson for the firm said, “It can be implemented on any asphalt plant from any manufacturer and that has any software.” The unit can allow a conventional asphalt plant to produce a quality cold mix, but at a much lower cost than a dedicated cold mix plant. The spokesperson said, “It’s a very compact design and fits inside a standard shipping container.”

The plant is said to be highly versatile and can use virgin materials or high percentages of RAP in the feed. Water injection, different binders and a range of additives can be used to suit the materials and application. By positioning the pugmill next to the plant, this makes the system easier to handle according to SAE and output can be up to 200tonnes/hour. SAE also says that this plant can help producers meet targets on decarbonising their operations. The spokesperson commented, “By definition it is decarbonised because there’s no heating.”
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Effective washing processes are crucial to provide quality materials
    July 1, 2013
    Effective washing processes are crucial to providing quality materials. Materials washing specialist CDE is offering three updated machines, the Evowash, the M2500 and the Agg Max 83R. All three machines have benefitted from improvements compared to previous versions but the Evowash unit features the most changes, including two ideas with patents pending. “We have been evolving the Evowash ever since we invented it 20 years ago, hence its name,” said Iain Walker, technical sales manager for the Middle East.
  • Roadtec changes the game of asphalt paving
    December 20, 2016
    Truly innovative is Roadtec’s Shuttle Buggy material transfer vehicle. John Irvine, President of Roadtec, explains how and why the ‘Buggy’ changed the game of asphalt paving Road paving technology changed dramatically in the 1930s when the American inventor Harry Barber unveiled the very first asphalt paver. Barber was what we today would call a “game-changer”. Innovations like Barber’s don’t come around often. In fact, decades can pass until another breakthrough product pushes the productivity and q
  • Electric paving becoming a reality
    July 21, 2025
    Electric asphalt paving machines are becoming a reality – Mike Woof writes
  • Bitumen technology specialists work to lower embodied carbon
    April 5, 2021
    A novel recipe for bitumen combines chemicals extracted from naturally occurring asphalt with a product created from cashew nut shells. Called ‘Instant Asphalt’, the idea is the brainchild of Frank Albrecht, managing of Albrecht Supply Concepts, which specialises in bitumen engineering.