Skip to main content

Upgrading a Benninghoven asphalt plant with new technology

Benninghoven plant owned by Breisach-based Johann Joos Tief- und Straßenbauunternehmung is 40 years old but now features new technology, increasing its range of capabilities. To meet demands for the use of RAP, the plant has been reconfigured with the latest technology from Benninghoven. This new addition to the plant will allow its facility as a Recycling Priority Plant (RPP). The plant upgrade features a Benninghoven BA 4000 system with a capacity of up to 320tonnes/hour.
October 18, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
The Benninghoven asphalt plant upgrade will boost quality and RAP capabilities for the contractor

Benninghoven plant owned by Breisach-based Johann Joos Tief- und Straßenbauunternehmung is 40 years old but now features new technology, increasing its range of capabilities.

To meet demands for the use of RAP, the plant has been reconfigured with the latest technology from 167 Benninghoven. This new addition to the plant will allow its facility as a Recycling Priority Plant (RPP).

The plant upgrade features a Benninghoven BA 4000 system with a capacity of up to 320tonnes/hour. It is equipped with a parallel counterflow drum, providing indirect heating of the RAP. This configuration ensures that the bitumen contained within the RAP is not damaged by direct heating. According to the firm, this layout allows higher RAP percentages (as much as 90% is claimed) to be processed in the mix than with conventional plants.

At the same time, the plant also meets the latest German emissions requirements. Asphalt produced by the plant is at a temperature of 160°C, while its efficient operation is said to deliver major savings in fuel consumption. According to Benninghoven, the configuration of the counterflow drum and the indirect hot gas heating system ensures that product quality is maximised while exhaust and heat emissions are minimised, boosting overall efficiency.

In addition to the hot feed system with its parallel drum and hot gas generator, the plant has also been retrofitted with a cold feed system: a multivariable feed hopper for a RAP material rate of up to 40%. Meanwhile, the preliminary batching units and other components from the previous plant were retained.

The plant has an EVO JET 4 combination burner for oil and coal dust delivering 23.7MW. It has a six-level screening system as well as a hot bin section with a capacity of 170tonnes in seven bins and mixed material storage silos holding 420tonnes. Other new components included a full enclosure around the plant, a filler tower and the latest Benninghoven BLS 3000 control system.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New innovations for crushing and screening equipment market
    September 16, 2015
    Mobile crushing and screening solutions have become a key component for the aggregate production sector - Mike Woof writes. The market for mobile crushing and screening solutions has grown enormously in recent years. With the first track-mounted mobile units having appeared in the 1980s and pioneered by a small number of manufacturers, the range and variety of units on the market has grown enormously since.
  • A new asphalt plant in Cameroon
    January 27, 2023
    A Lintec CSM4000 containerised asphalt plant in Cameroon has helped with the construction of the country’s first-ever expressway linking its two largest cities, Douala and Yaoundé. The new route replaces an older roadway in use for over three decades that no longer met traffic needs.
  • Fayat develops new Packliner coldmix plant
    February 10, 2015
    Fayat intends to capture sales in additional market segments with its Packliner coldmix plant. The firm says that this plant suits duties in rural or urban road projects for which the use of products such as cold bituminuous mixtures is a major asset. Benefits include low production cost, easy transportation of mixtures and low greenhouse gas or smoke emissions.
  • Fayat develops new Packliner coldmix plant
    January 6, 2017
    Fayat intends to capture sales in additional market segments with its Packliner coldmix plant. The firm says that this plant suits duties in rural or urban road projects for which the use of products such as cold bituminuous mixtures is a major asset. Benefits include low production cost, easy transportation of mixtures and low greenhouse gas or smoke emissions.