Tarmac adds to largest UK fleet of moving floor trailers
Published by Louise Mulhall,
Editorial Assistant
Dry Bulk,
Tarmac, the UK’s leading sustainable building materials and construction solutions company, has added 40 brand new trailers to its line-up of moving floor trailers as part of its commitment to continuously improving the safety of its fleet of HGVs.
The new vehicles will operate nationwide and have bolstered Tarmac’s total number of vehicles to almost 100 nationally, making it the largest fleet of its type in the UK’s highways industry.
Moving floor trailers differ from traditional articulated tipper trucks by using an in-built moving floor to ‘walk’ the product out of the trailer in order to discharge their payloads.
The trailers reduce risk with their increased stability and ability to operate without tipping, providing a number of health and safety benefits for their operators and those working on site. They are also able to discharge materials in locations that would otherwise pose a risk including underneath overhead power lines or in tunnels.
Sean McGrae, Tarmac’s senior manager, national transport, said: “Operating the UK’s largest fleet of these new, safer moving floor vehicles enables us to build on our capability to supply construction projects through the UK. Safety is our first priority and we are consistently working to improve standards, so the advantages of these vehicles are clear. Being able to offload material safely under overhead obstruction and restricted environments reduces risk for our drivers and site teams, and allows work to be completed more flexibly and efficiently. “Other major benefits are that moving floor trailers can operate in tight areas as well as allow continuous laying, which increases site productivity.”
In addition to their enhanced practicality and safety credentials, the moving floor vehicles’ increased carrying capacity compared to rigid trucks means that they also offer improved environmental performance. The ability to deliver a higher payload per trailer results in a lower number of total vehicle movements on a project, thereby reducing transport CO2 emissions and improving carbon footprint.
Read the article online at: https://www.drybulkmagazine.com/material-handling/28042017/tarmac-adds-to-largest-uk-fleet-of-moving-floor-trailers/
You might also like
UMAS study finds optimising port waiting times could reduce dry bulker emissions by 10%
The study finds that these ships spend between 4-6% of their operational time, around 15-22 days per year, waiting at anchor outside ports before being given a berth.