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MORE PULL, EXTRA HEIGHT PUSHES NEW SENNEBOGEN LOG HANDLER
TO THE FOREFRONT FOR WARD TIMBER
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PRESS RELEASE |
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
The purpose-built 830 M-T handles multiple roles in the Ward Timber wood yard with its all-wheel-drive and elevating cab. Linden, TX – To keep the woodyard organized and the sawmill humming at Ward Timber, Dale Surratt expects a lot from his material handlers. When the time came to replace his two aging machines, he was ready to look at some new ideas. “We had heard a bit about these machines from SENNEBOGEN through their area representative and their dealer here,” said Surratt, the Operations Manager at Ward Timber. “We did some research, then Max Nation, from Waukesha Pearce Inc. (WPI), put together the trip for us to see their new machine at work at a paper mill up in Wisconsin. What we saw there made a big impact on my purchase decision.” Operating since 1978, Ward Timber produces 300,000 tons of tree-length timber annually and 400,000 tons of chips to area mills, along with another 60,000 tons of biomass. The sawmill finishes 20 million board-feet of hardwood products per year, ranging from pallet material to cabinet-grade wood. Soon after the onsite demo, Surratt placed the order for two SENNEBOGEN 830 M-T log handlers. The 830 M-T is a relatively new design from SENNEBOGEN, whose extensive line of material handlers is best known in scrap recycling yards and port facilities. However, the Ward Timber management team could quickly see that 830 M-T was built right for their needs. “It was the two transmissions that really did it,” says Lewis Melton, Ward Timber’s Wood Yard Manager, referring to the unique all wheel transmission, design configuration of the 830 M-T. “We have had transmission problems in the past. With two transmissions pulling instead of one, this machine gives us the rimpull we need in the yard.” Hitched up for multi-purpose use According to Constantino Lannes, President of SENNEBOGEN LLC, this is exactly the kind of multi-use duty SENNEBOGEN had in mind when the 830 M-T was designed. “A typical scrap handler or barge loader isn’t built for heavy pulling,” Lannes explains. “But those stresses are a common part of the job in a wood yard. We have worked with timber companies all over the world and we understand their particular needs for a purpose-built machine like this.” With stresses on the transmission divided over two axles, Ward Timber looks forward to increased uptime with less demand for servicing. Meanwhile, the log handlers’ unique final drive has been more than able to negotiate the yard conditions at Ward Timber, even when the hardpan turns to mud, and to maintain high-speed efficiency as they move from job to job. A closer look at high stacking Lewis Melton acknowledges that efficient stacking requires skilled operators, but anything that helps the operator will make the job easier, faster and safer. His new 830 M-T units handle logs ranging from 12 to 40 feet long, using a Rotobec grapple and a dead heel. On a typical day, the yard receives and sorts about 50 truck loads. “High stacking is very important to us,” Melton says, “so we can best utilize our wet yard area.” The elevated cab also provides the operator with a better vantage point for picking from the stacks, and for transferring logs from the wagon to the mill’s infeed deck. Alone in its class Smelley reports that the 830 M-T log handler delivers the highest drawbar pull in its class. It’s an 85,000 lb. rubber-tired machine powered by a 206 HP Cummins engine. Compared to a standard 830 M material handler, the undercarriage of the 830 M-T is specially designed to withstand the stresses of pulling heavy loads behind. About SENNEBOGEN
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For more information on the full line of SENNEBOGEN green line material handlers, contact:
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Constantino Lannes,
President |
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- NOVEMBER 2010 -
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