Skip to main content

TSL Contractors in the UK adds more Volvos to its fleet

In the Scottish highland Isle of Mull, TSL Contractors has made a significant purchase of Volvo Construction Equipment products only a year after buying its first Volvo excavator. The company, based in the town of Craignure, will use the machines for building roads as part of the business’s many hydroelectric contracts. New machinery includes 14tonne EC140D excavators, three 22tonne EC220E and one EC300 30tonne excavators, as well as two A25G articulated haulers. TSL managing director Andrew Knight sa
October 16, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
In the Scottish highland Isle of Mull, TSL Contractors has made a significant purchase of 7659 Volvo Construction Equipment products only a year after buying its first Volvo excavator.

The company, based in the town of Craignure, will use the machines for building roads as part of the business’s many hydroelectric contracts.

New machinery includes 14tonne EC140D excavators, three 22tonne EC220E and one EC300 30tonne excavators, as well as two A25G articulated haulers. TSL managing director Andrew Knight said the new machines are building access roads to remote job sites and preparing trenches for laying large-bore water pipes. “We’ve been very impressed with the machine’s performance and reliability especially on heavy duty rock-breaking applications,” he said.

Typically this involves a good deal of rock breaking on site and consequently, the EC300E and EC220E’s have been supplied complete with hydraulic hammers. The 22tonne capacity A25G articulated haulers are deployed on hauling crushed stone to construct the access roads and move overburden on site. One of the trucks has been supplied with optional 750/65R25 floatation tyres giving the benefit of reduced ground pressure which is ideal for coping with more boggy conditions and minimising the impact on fragile ground.

The EC140D machines have been supplied with Steelwrist Tilt Rotators and are used primarily on reinstating the ground around the pipelines once the water pipes have been laid and covered.

Knight said the machines can reduce the impact on the environment because they both have tilt rotators. This means they can reinstate the surrounding area, including profiling and finishing simultaneously instead of using a variety of equipment. This also makes more economic sense, he said. Apart from hydroelectric contracts, TSL also specialises in affordable housing contracts for the Scottish government and contracts for Scottish Water and other national contractors. It also continues to maintain a presence in the extractive, aggregates and ready-mix concrete industries.

Related Content

  • MOBA machine control tools help in asphalt paving
    January 12, 2015
    Machine control systems from MOBA are playing an important role in laying out a new street in the southern German village of Apfeldorf in Bavaria. New development in the village is seeing the construction of 14 new homes as well as a new street being built and the time savings and cost savings of machine control systems are proving highly beneficial. Although well proven in larger projects, these technologies are now being used in smaller construction projects also, with major advantages for the users. Loc
  • India’s longest road tunnel continues apace with Atlas Copco support
    May 20, 2014
    The challenging construction of India’s largest road tunnel is part of a vital US$500 million project aiming to connect the isolated northern state of Jammu and Kashmir with the rest of the vast and highly populated country. Guy Woodford reports Travelling on National Highway 1A (NH 1A) in northern India should be the dictionary definition of ordeal. The single lane, narrow and winding road crosses some of the steepest, most treacherous terrain on the planet. The arduous route becomes especially difficult t
  • Sheffield duty for a Miller PowerLatch
    June 3, 2019
    The Miller PowerLatch Tilt was recently the attachment of choice for Yorkshire-based engineering consultancy JN Bentley, part of global engineering consultancy Mott MacDonald.
  • Booming Chinese aggregate demand
    February 22, 2013
    Global demand for construction aggregates is set to increase 5.2% a year until 2015 to 48.3 billion tonnes, according to research by The Freedonia Group in the United States. The same source tips China alone to account for half of all new aggregate demand worldwide in the period 2010-2015. Guy Woodford reports on the growing importance of the Asian aggregates market. China is already the biggest nation for aggregate production and use in the world, and the competition among the giants of aggregate productio