Skip to main content

Vögele demonstrates spray system

Vögele expects to find new customers for its latest Sprayjet system following successful demonstrations to UK contractors. The SprayJet machine was used to repair a busy road in Ipswich, in eastern England, placing the tack coat and asphalt surface in a single pass.
February 28, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Based on Vögele's proven Super 1800-2 paver, the SprayJet is said to provide optimum bonding between layers
1194 Vögele expects to find new customers for its latest Sprayjet system following successful demonstrations to UK contractors. The SprayJet machine was used to repair a busy road in Ipswich, in eastern England, placing the tack coat and asphalt surface in a single pass.

The demonstration was carried out by Cambridgeshire based 3279 Finesse Paving and Civil Engineering, working for main contractor 2399 Tarmac on behalf of Suffolk County Council.

Based on Vögele's proven Super 1800-2 paver, the SprayJet is said to provide optimum bonding between layers, keep the job site clean, and eliminate a tack coat truck from the paving train. The practice can also avoid road closures caused by overspray from tanker-based plant.

Director of contractor Finesse Neil Giddings said: "It's a good idea to integrate the paver with the bitumen emulsion spray seal or tack coat application, as it means other vehicles don't have to travel on newly sprayed emulsion. There's no soiling of other roads or overspray to passing vehicles during the process."

The SprayJet module is easily demountable, enabling it to be fitted or removed in a short time. This feature permits the use of the paver for conventional tasks, while its compact design suits it to inner-city applications and minimises transport costs.

SprayJet can alter the rate of spread of the tack coat from 0.2kg/m² upwards, allowing the bitumen emulsion to be finely metered and applied in small volumes at slow paving speeds. A low and constant spraying pressure of just 3bar allows spraying work to be performed with a minimum of spray mist and pollution.

The SprayJet module includes an emulsion tank holding 2,000litres. The operator only has to enter the desired rate of spread on the touch screen. Five adjustable spray bars with a total of 20 self-sealing spray nozzles are located at the front, sides and behind the crawler tracks.

While the tank should normally be filled with hot emulsion, the system also includes an integrated heating unit to maintain the emulsion at the desired temperature. Temperature sensors are fitted in order to prevent the emulsion from burning and automatically switch off the heating process if the emulsion level becomes too low. The heating limit can be set by the controller to a value from 0-80°C.

The Super 1800-2 SJ's ability to spray liquid asphalt or emulsion also suits it to applying for ultrathin bonded wearing courses, in which modified emulsion and aggregate can be placed in one pass.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asphalt and bitumen - testing for performance
    February 29, 2012
    The stresses placed on modern asphalt and bitumen means that specialist equipment is essential to make sure performance specifications are met. As road traffic increases at a rapid pace and road safety becomes a priority issue, asphalt is put under increasingly higher stresses. For example, road surfaces are subject to compression, flexural tensions and tangential stresses: internal friction, depending on the aggregates, and the cohesion, guaranteed by bitumen's composition, are the two main properties whic
  • Innovative high performance asphalt technology
    February 14, 2012
    An authority replaces container wharf pavement damaged by forklift loads in world's first commercial use of high-performance asphalt base course. By Paul Fournier
  • Massenza’s new vision for 2014
    March 12, 2014
    Massenza has started 2014 with a new approach to its range of bitumen emulsion plants, streamlining its four larger models into two, and adding a smaller plant. This has allowed Massenza to optimise the design and components for each size of plant, which in turn allows the company to offer its customers a more competitive deal. At the same time, Massenza has made three major technical improvements to the plants: a new type of material for the water tank which resists corrosion; a new dosing system for th
  • Wirtgen’s 3800 CR rips it up in San Jose
    May 16, 2017
    In California, in-situ cold recycling with a Wirtgen 3800 CR recycler has proved to be the most economical solution. In the US’s Golden State – California – Wirtgen’s 708kW powerhouse the 3800 CR recycler resurfaced 160km of San José’s main traffic arteries in situ, on-the-spot. The 3800 CR worked with a Vögele VISION 5200-2i tracked paver in a rear-load process. With this method, the 3800 CR travels in reverse, removing the damaged asphalt layers in a down-cut process and transferring the recycled material