Skip to main content

CJ Holmes choose Hyundai Machines for new Plant-Hire business

CJ Holmes & Son, a family-run company in, Skegness, UK, has opened a plant hire business, CJ Holmes Plant and Tool Hire. The new company has 12 machines in its fleet which includes 10-Hyundai machines ranging in operating weights from 1.7tonne up to 22tonne. All are supplied by Hyundai dealer EP Industries, based in Alfreton, Derbyshire. Managing director Chris Holmes said one of the main reasons Hyundai machines were chosen is for their reliability meaning they very low maintenance machines and down-
May 23, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Comfort and little down time, from Hyundai machines
CJ Holmes & Son, a family-run company in, Skegness, UK, has opened a plant hire business, CJ Holmes Plant and Tool Hire.

The new company has 12 machines in its fleet which includes 10-236 Hyundai machines ranging in operating weights from 1.7tonne up to 22tonne. All are supplied by Hyundai dealer EP Industries, based in Alfreton, Derbyshire.

Managing director Chris Holmes said one of the main reasons Hyundai machines were chosen is for their reliability meaning they very low maintenance machines and down-time is minimal.

“We purchased our first Hyundai from EP Industries in 2013 and we now have a fleet of 10-Hyundai units which includes the R17Z-9A, a 1.7tonne zero tail swing machine,” said Holmes.

“We also have in our excavator fleet two R60CR-9A 6tonne machines, two 14tonne R140LC-9A and two R160LC-9A’s. Our latest purchases have been another R220LC-9A 22tonne machine and a 2.5tonne R25Z-9A – another zero tailswing machine.”

The family business started 20 years ago as a one-man-one-machine operation working mainly in ground work for caravan sites in Lincolnshire until civil engineering firm JN Bentley offered the company an environmental contract. The business continues to expand into new markets including highways contracts and the utilities sector.

Ian Lovely has been an operator for over 30-years and has been with CJ Homes for just over two years where he spends 95% of his time out on hire. In his time at company Ian has operated the majority of the machines in the CJ Holmes fleet and is currently working on an Environmental Agency project in Skegness for JN Bentley, operating the Hyundai 14tonne R140LC-9A.

“When you are working on a machine for 12-14 hours a day, it needs to be comfortable,” said Lovely. “And the cab in the Hyundai has all the ‘mod-con’s’ and visibility is excellent too.

“I have found that the machines are good on fuel too. When I am on the R160 (17,800kg operating weight) in heavy digging mode I can get a day and a half of operating on one tank full of fuel. There’s very little or no ‘down-time’ with these machines I have had none at all on the R140, the R220. And the R160 has just clocked up 2,000 hours with not one moment of working time has been lost,” said Lovely

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Earthmoving machines the backbone of construction
    February 7, 2012
    Earthmoving machines remain the backbone of construction operations - writes Mike Woof. ADTs, excavators and wheeled loaders play pivotal roles in most construction jobs with the earthmoving stage providing a key component of most projects.
  • Upgrade for Russian quarry
    February 22, 2012
    In Russia, the Ministry for Industry established the Gurovo Beton quarry in the Tula region south of Moscow in 1951.
  • Asphalt plant benefits from production upgrade
    July 30, 2019
    A leading civil engineering firm and road contractor, Socogetra, has upgraded three of its asphalt plants, boosting efficiency. The key to the upgrade has been the revamp of the control system, which allows the firm to produce mix specifications more accurately and effectively than before. This is crucial given the increasing requirement for higher quality asphalt mixes for road construction purposes. Socogetra said that it had been using its proven Ammann AS2000plus Control System for many years. Howeve
  • Increased versatility is offered by the new Doosan wheeled excavators
    January 6, 2017
    Aimed at the 14tonne and 16tonne classes, the new Doosan DX140W-3 and DX160W-3 wheeled excavators are said to offer major performance gains over the models being replaced. As with the firm’s new crawler excavators, new cabs provide a more comfortable working environment, with improved controls and ergonomics and in-cab noise levels that are reduced by 5dBA. Both machines are powered by the proven Doosan DL06KB diesel, which delivers a 2% increase in power to 102kW and a 12% increase in torque over the previ