Skip to main content

Magnetic filtration units increase efficiency

One of the USA’s largest and best-known dealers for Caterpillar off-road vehicles, Whayne Supply, has teamed up with a small UK engineering company, Magnom, to introduce magnetic filtration units that have been shown to increase operational efficiency and decrease downtime.
February 21, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Caterpillar off-road vehicles dealer, Whayne Supply, has teamed up with small engineering company Magnom
One of the USA’s largest and best-known dealers for 178 Caterpillar off-road vehicles, 1467 Whayne Supply, has teamed up with a small UK engineering company, 1468 Magnom, to introduce magnetic filtration units that have been shown to increase operational efficiency and decrease downtime.

The filtration units, which remove ferrous particles, are being used in conjunction with traditional barrier techniques to provide “unmatched levels of filtration on the vehicles.”

The custom-designed units, using patented Magnom technology, are now in volume production.

Magnom engineers, led by the company’s technology director and original inventor Jobey Marlowe, worked with Whayne Supply over a three-year period to develop the custom units for the Caterpillar vehicles.

Whayne Supply focuses on the Kentucky and southern Indiana markets and is marketing the new filters to other North American Caterpillar dealers.

The company’s technology division general manager Edwin Downer said: “During testing, we were convinced by the results that adding Magnom units to the machine systems would reduce both operating expenses and unscheduled downtime.”

Magnom chairman Robert Spender said: “It is especially pleasing to us to be working with a partner that has the resources to introduce the benefits of Magnom technology to a wider audience. These benefits quickly translate into reduced warranty and general maintenance costs and so we are quietly confident of take up across North America.”

Magnom units are said to have an exceptionally long life and a design which enables them to capture a surprisingly large mass of ferrous material, filtering particle sizes down to 0.07µ (1µ or micron is equal to one millionth of a metre), while never impeding fluid flow.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cat sees reason for global equipment growth
    January 6, 2017
    Caterpillar ceo Doug Oberhelman is cautiously optimistic that recovery in the global equipment market will continue throughout 2014. Speaking at Conexpo, Mr Oberhelman said that the company was in the best possible position to make the most of steadily growing demand, with a host of improved machines and technologies on show. “The North American market is showing the best growth signs in March that we’ve seen for four years,” he said. “This year the market is stronger, housing is better and we see a very
  • Cat sees reason for global equipment growth
    March 5, 2014
    Caterpillar ceo Doug Oberhelman is cautiously optimistic that recovery in the global equipment market will continue throughout 2014. Speaking at Conexpo, Mr Oberhelman said that the company was in the best possible position to make the most of steadily growing demand, with a host of improved machines and technologies on show. “The North American market is showing the best growth signs in March that we’ve seen for four years,” he said. “This year the market is stronger, housing is better and we see a very
  • ERIC 2016: What shape the ‘Smart Road’?
    February 7, 2017
    Optimism about the future of highways worldwide abounded at the inaugural European Road Infrastructure Conference (ERIC) in Leeds, UK Around 500 delegates passed through the varied sessions during the three-day event at the Royal Armouries Museum in the northern English city of Leeds. They came away with many visions of what a motorway and road could look like. But what speakers at the event - co-organised by the Brussels-based European Union Road Federation (ERF) and the UK’s Road Safety Markings Ass
  • FEHRL and CEDR pledge more road research cooperation
    February 10, 2015
    The Forum of European National Highway Research Laboratories (FEHRL) and the Conference of European Directors of Roads (CEDR) have pledged to increase cooperation on road research. A memorandum of understanding to cement the cooperation was signed during a one-day event that featured speakers from national members of FEHRL and CEDR. Stefan Strick, president of FEHRL and also of the German Federal Highway Research Institute, signed the memorandum alongside CEDR president Simon Grima, who is also chief office