Skip to main content

Wirtgen machines help with road recycling in Italy

One of the first Wirtgen W 200 Hi cold milling machines off the assembly line is now being used for road recyling work in southern Europe. The versatility of the machine due to its novel 400mm offset drum capability has proven extremely useful for the contractor in Italy. Tuscany–based Endi Asfalti is now using the large and highly productive W 200 Hi for a wide range of milling jobs that would previously have been carried out using a combination of large and small milling machines. The proven W 200 milling
March 18, 2016 Read time: 4 mins
The machine’s ability to work close to walls has been important for the Italian contractor
One of the first 2395 Wirtgen W 200 Hi cold milling machines off the assembly line is now being used for road recyling work in southern Europe

The versatility of the machine due to its novel 400mm offset drum capability has proven extremely useful for the contractor in Italy. Tuscany–based Endi Asfalti is now using the large and highly productive W 200 Hi for a wide range of milling jobs that would previously have been carried out using a combination of large and small milling machines. The proven W 200 milling machine was developed further to become the W 200 Hi, with key features being the hydraulically driven drum with its novel offset system. The offset allows the drum to be displaced 400mm to the right or left. For the Italian contractor, the feature is very useful for handling milling jobs on the often narrow and twisting roads in the area and which in urban areas in particular, also feature walls and buildings in close proximity.

Despite an extensive public transport system, more than 120,000 vehicles/day use the inner-city roads in Modena. This leads to considerable wear on the 850km of roads in the city. As a result, Modena’s Department of Public Works and Maintenance has a strong focus on ensuring the roads are in good condition. In the eastern part of the city, 40mm of the surface course had to be removed over a total stretch of around 2km.
As the area was close to the city’s fruit and vegetable wholesale market with its heavy transport needs, the work had to be carried out quickly and with the minimum disruption to traffic. At the same time, precision was required during the milling work, as utilities located in some sections of the road meant that there were numerous manhole covers. Normally, this would have called for the use of a large milling machine to remove most of the surface course, with a small milling machine then being used to finish off along the edges and around the manhole covers. The versatility of the W 200 Hi due to the hydraulically driven milling drum with its offset capability allows for considerably smaller milling radii. The machine operator was able to use the W 200 Hi first to cut round the manhole covers lining the edge of the road on the right- and left-hand sides. The powerful and productive machine was then used to remove the long sections of roadway in a single pass.

The machine’s versatility was equally useful for carrying out a job in the medieval town centre of Prato. Located 10km north-west of Florence, the town features narrow and winding streets, while different milling depths had to be strictly adhered to in order to avoid damaging the historic stone slabs under the asphalt surface. The narrow road width of just 4-5m was another challenge and would usually have been carried out by a small milling machine.
Roughly 300m of asphalt pavement had to be removed along the Via Carbonaia, one of the roads inside the town's original walls. A milling depth of 50-120mm was needed to reprofile the superstructure for the surface and binder course and at the same time prevent damage to the subgrade. Aided by the automatic LEVEL PRO levelling system, the machine operator was able to comply with the different milling depths specified. The automatic LEVEL PRO levelling system is integrated into the machine control system and constantly compares the current milling depth with the required depth.

Due to the narrow road width, turning the machine around was impossible. But because of the drum offset, the machine was able to work up to the edge on both the right- and left-hand sides, as required. Scaffolding projecting into the road was a further hindrance in Prato, but one which the drum offset was also able to cope with. While the machine chassis and operator's platform ensured a safe distance between the operator and scaffolding, the two zero edges allowed the milling drum assembly to continue cutting through the asphalt pavement right up to the edge of the road. It is of note too that the drum offset system is also of benefit for highway working as it allows the machine to mill right up to the edge of a concrete barrier. And this is a feature the Italian contractor intends to take advantage of on further projects in the future.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Manufacturers have developed key innovations in recycling machines
    March 4, 2015
    Manufacturers are making advances in stabiliser/reclaimers and milling machines - Mike Woof reports. The market for milling equipment is a competitive one, with a range of companies from around the globe now offering machines for this segment: BOMAG, Caterpillar, Dynapac, Roadtec, Volvo CE and Wirtgen. In recent years a number of Chinese firms have entered this segment and determining the number of machines these companies manufacture is difficult, although most of their units are sold in China. But interna
  • Multiple milling machines removing surface
    April 24, 2019
    Milling subcontractor Pavement Recycling Systems removed thousands of tonnes of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) from a runway at Oakland International Airport in California recently. The firm used a fleet of six Wirtgen W 210i cold milling machines to remove the asphalt in less than 60 hours from Runway 12-30, along the shore of San Francisco Bay. In total, 47,000tons of asphalt were milled within a 60-hour time frame, nonstop day and night, plus a single-shift second phase a week later. The firm start
  • Compact planer under test
    February 22, 2012
    BOMAG has carried out a successful series of demonstrations of its new BM500/15 compact milling machines in Berlin. The machine was tested at the Representative Offices of Rheinland-Palatinate to the Federal Government and the European Union in Berlin and for the first time the planer carried out practical tests in the grounds of the company's Berlin Branch. A total of around 100 guests watched a highly convincing demonstration. After a reception at the Representative Offices of Rheinland-Palatinate delegat
  • New developments for milling machine manufacturers
    February 20, 2014
    The market for milling machines is highly competitive and there is an array of firms offering equipment to the global market. German company Wirtgen is the worldwide market leader and has an enormous range of models available, but other companies too are keen to grow market share, with Caterpillar and Roadtec strong in North America and BOMAG, Dynapac and Caterpillar are also pushing hard to build share in Europe for instance. Other companies too are keen to grow their shares of global sales and several of