webcam-b

Saudi Arabian firm adds ten Demag and Terex cranes

ACT Crane & Heavy Equipment?s new five-axle Demag AC 160-5 are the most compact cranes in their capacity class. (Image source: Terex)

Saudi Arabian crane rental company Arabian Consolidated Trading (ACT Crane & Heavy Equipment) is expanding its crane fleet through a recent order for four Demag? AC 160-5, two AC 300-6 all terrain cranes and four Terex? RT 90 rough terrain cranes

The new units help support ACT customers around its locations in Jubail Industrial City and Yanbu Al-Bahr.

?We are proud to serve the team at ACT Crane & Heavy Equipment,? said Deepak Jain, senior sales manager for Terex Cranes in the Middle East. ?They are an organisation that demands quality from their people and the equipment they use every day. Those high expectations help them achieve great things for their customers and make them business leaders in their region.?

ACT Crane & Heavy Equipment?s new five-axle Demag AC 160-5 all terrain cranes have a 160-tonne lifting capacity and a maximum system length of 95 metres. They are the most compact cranes in their capacity class with a total length of 14 metres and a carrier width of 2.75 metres and deliver excellent manoeuvrability with all-axle steering, independent rear axle steering, and dynamic launch control.

The six-axle Demag AC 300-6 all-terrain crane, boasting a 300-tonne classification, features an 80 metres main boom. This new six-axle Demag all terrain crane delivers strength, reach and versatility needed for accomplishing the most demanding jobs at lower operational and transporting costs than similar models in its class.

The Terex RT 90 rough terrain cranes have an 86-tonne rated capacity, a maximum boom length of 47 metres and a tip height of 50 metres. IC-1 controls provide easy operation, smooth control and integrated diagnostics while the removable counterweight will let ACT move quickly and efficiently from job to job.

ACT Crane & Heavy Equipment will take delivery and commission its new Demag and Terex crane models over the next several months, according to the company.