Skip to main content

Germany’s B-85 gets the treatment from Bomag’s BM 2200/75 planer

By this spring, Bomag’s new BM 2200/75 cold planer will have removed all the old pavement from a 2.6km section of Germany’s federal highway B-85. Work on the section between Amberg and Pittersberg started at the end of 2016 after the Ministry of Transport classified the road as being in “urgent need” of upgrading as part of the Federal Transport Infrastructure Plan. Actual roadworks began in mid-June 2017 after essential forestry work had been carried out, such as the removal of tree roots on both sides
February 23, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
On this full depth removal job, Bomag’s new BM 2200-75 planer readily handled a variety of material types along the old section of the B-85
By this spring, Bomag’s new BM 2200/75 cold planer will have removed all the old pavement from a 2.6km section of Germany’s federal highway B-85.


Work on the section between Amberg and Pittersberg started at the end of 2016 after the Ministry of Transport classified the road as being in “urgent need” of upgrading as part of the Federal Transport Infrastructure Plan. Actual roadworks began in mid-June 2017 after essential forestry work had been carried out, such as the removal of tree roots on both sides of the road.

The existing road, which will become the Schwandorf-Amberg carriageway, will be given a new pavement this spring. However, before this happens, the old road structure has to be fully removed down to the subsoil.

Fiedler, a contractor from nearby Röhrnbach in the southern Bavarian Forest, has wide expertise in removing concrete and asphalt pavements in layers or, as in the case of the B 85, full-depth removal. Fiedler uses 172 BOMAG equipment including the BM 600/15 and BM 1300/35 cold planers.

Due to the tight construction schedule, full removal had to be completed before the first frosts at the end of 2017. Using a risk-avoidance approach on this €10 million project, the company chose the new BM 2200/75 model with its noted  power and low operating costs, such as less fuel consumption, said Georg Fiedler, company owner.

The complete asphalt removal is carried out in two stages, extending it to 22,000m². Firstly, the surface course was removed with an average thickness of 4cm. In the second milling step, the bearing course was removed with an average layer thickness of 26cm.

Although mixed materials and differing layer thicknesses were found in the course of milling work, the BM 2200/75 readily handled these variable materials and thicknesses extremely well, said Fielding.

Highway contractors depend on easy, straightforward transportation of their equipment from site to site. BOMAG designers came up with a novel solution: the entire milling box with drum is equipped with a quick-change system. The entire milling box can be removed and reinstalled in just 30 minutes. This short set-up and removal time is aided by quick-release hydraulic couplings instead of the usual bolted connections.


“Without a milling box and drum, the weight is below the key 60-tonne limit,” explained Hans Kraft, company managing director. “Even the hydraulically folding conveyor belt that comes as standard helps to reduce transportation issues.”

Fiedler’s BOMAG BM 2200/75 has also been refitted easily and quickly for a range of applications on site and at the contractor’s yard. BOMAG offers a wide range of milling drums, including a standard milling drum, a fine milling drum, and a Powerdrum. Each is available in 2,000mm and 2,200mm widths for milling depths up to 330mm.

Bomaag will be at INTERMAT - International Exhibition for Construction and Infrastructure - in Paris, April 23-28.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Reduced emissions, costs, with recycled asphalt
    February 21, 2012
    Recycling is a key issue for asphalt road construction, with many technologies now coming to market. Bith an ever increasing emphasis on sustainability forcing change in the construction sector in Europe and North America, the highway sector now has to seek new solutions.
  • New developments in asphalt compaction
    June 14, 2019
    New developments in asphalt compaction offer performance gains for contractors, with future innovations being unveiled – Mike Woof writes Advanced asphalt compactors are offering huge gains in performance over previous generation machines. Better working quality and finish is claimed for the latest machines, while future developments will offer sophisticated solutions. The new ARX 91 articulated tandem roller from Ammann is designed as a high productivity compactor that can be used on both thin and t
  • Telematics could be an area for John Deere and Wirtgen resource sharing
    April 20, 2018
    The gods were smiling on the Wirtgen Group for the company’s Road Technology Days 2018 event. This year it was held in summer-like weather at the recently expanded Voegele plant near Mannheim in Germany. Within days the season dramatically changed from dreary chilly late winter to high temperatures, just in time to bathe the amassed demonstration equipment and the 4,000 guests in summer sunshine. But there won’t be any such dramatic changes within the Wirtgen Group, according to Domenic Ruccolo. After 28
  • Bertha ends her Alaskan Way voyage in Seattle
    December 21, 2017
    Seattle's State Route 99 viaduct is coming down. David Arminas was on site. Bertha, the world’s largest diameter earth pressure balance tunnel boring machine, with a cutterhead diameter of 17.5m, is no more. Her 2.7km journey underneath the waterfront area of Seattle finished on April 4 and the power went off for the last time on an extraordinary TBM that had finally completed an extraordinary job. “A small sidewalk job would have had more impact on city traffic than we have had,” says Brian Russell a v