magazine (1470 KB, PDF) - Mercedes-Benz
Transcription
magazine (1470 KB, PDF) - Mercedes-Benz
Mercedes-Benz 1/1999 Motorway cleaner and caretaker U 2450 L a three-way winner UNIMOG JOURNAL Rugged road-railers on show Front page photos Editorial A new era for a global group 3 Sales Organisation Simply indispensable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Proud parade: Our photographer recorded this remarkable line-up of rugged road-railers at the Road-Railer Symposium at the DaimlerChrysler plant in Rastatt (see pages 8+9) Three enthusiasts and five Unimogs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Road-railers: versatility means economy Ready for all weather conditions .............................. ......................................... “My entire working life” 8 10 12 Uniscope DaimlerChrysler supports Kosovo aid effort . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 Cargo tractor for Stockholm ............................................... 15 U 90 Turbo for Innsbruck airport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Motorway maintenance: At the South Bavarian Motorways Depot, the Unimog is a master of all trades (pages 4+5) Publisher: DaimlerChrysler AG, Unimog Division Responsible for contents Dieter Sellnau, Unimog Division UNIMOG JOURNAL Coordination: Martin Adam, Unimog Division Editorial Board: Martin Adam, Erwin Kirschner, Dieter Mutard, Karin Weidenbacher Woodworking wonder: Martin Kühling’s carpentry business in Visbek is making more money with a Unimog (pages 12 + 13) Contributors to this issue: Copy: Michael Brettnacher, Stefan Loeffler, Dieter Mutard, Ute Risché Photos: Michael Brettnacher, DWM Pressebüro und Verlag, Unimog Division, Ute Risché Address for correspondence: DaimlerChrysler AG, Unimog Division Sales Promotion, D-76568 Gaggenau Production: Dieter Mutard DWM Pressebüro und Verlag, Ringstraße 11, D-89081 Ulm, tel. +49 7 31/9 62 89-0, fax +49 731/9 62 89-30 English translation: Paul Boothroyd & Ron Hughes for BauerBoothroyd Übersetzungen, D-73614 Schorndorf The Unimog Journal is published twice a year. Next issue: Autumn 99. The publishers can accept no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts and photographs. Printed on paper bleached without chlorine. Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany Your local Unimog partner Editorial A new era for a global group – and for the Unimog It was called Day One in the history of the DaimlerChrysler Group – Nov. 17, 1998, a date that stands for breaking the mould and forging a new company, a global player in the truest sense of the word. From a position of strength on their home markets in North America and Europe, in the future every member of the DaimlerChrysler Group will be reaching out to expand first and foremost to the growth markets of Asia, South America and Eastern Europe. The Commercial Vehicle Division – already the most global operation in the Group – is no exception, and here too specific regional growth targets are being set. That’s good news for all our readers because it means that customer expectations will be met faster than ever before. Needless to say, as an integral part of Mercedes-Benz Trucks Europe, the Unimog Division as well is set to reap long-term benefits from this strategy. With its international corporate culture, the new global Group will be forging additional leeway for creativity and innovation. That sets the stage for the Unimog team in Gaggenau, and of course for all our distributors at home and abroad, in order to make use of synergy effects in terms of technology, business processes and structures. And as the new strategy also creates a high degree of security, it has triggered a genuine spirit of renewal within the company. For many years the Commercial Vehicle Division’s products and brands have been leading the field in the international commercial vehicle sector, none more so than Mercedes-Benz. As the world’s biggest manufacturer of trucks (over 6 t gvw) and buses (over 9 t), our company has a record of steady growth across the product spectrum. What’s more, in the Unimog we have a multi-func- tional implement carrier with a virtually infinite range of equipment and accessories, a vehicle you, our customers, still appreciate and love to drive more than 50 years after it was first launched. In the course of 1998, the Group’s 50 production plants around the world built a total of some 490,000 commercial vehicles, posting sales of DM 49 billion. With its significant contribution to consolidated earnings, the Commercial Vehicle Division has become a key pillar of DaimlerChrysler’s operations, underpinning its market leadership through the introduction of innovative models and penetrating new markets with highly competitive products. Up to now we have resumed to the main points in order to turn the focus from the new DaimlerChrysler over to the Unimog business. How do you, the customer, stand to benefit when we set the targets for new products and market growth as part of our corporate planning process? It is important to realise here, that behind all our considerations, there are fixed parameters that shape the way we work for and with you. These crucial criteria are: ● Professionalism – offered in all our products and services ● Innovative prowess – reflected not only in the way we engineer our products but also in the way we care for Unimog and the people who use them ● Customer orientation – expressed in the superior products we supply, in the way we exceed your expectations in terms of quality and service, and regularly keep in touch ● Quality standards – that wins us and the Mercedes-Benz Unimog your trust and respect ● Speed – in responding to customer wishes faster than the competition and transforming innovative ideas into marketable products and services ● Responsibility – that we shoulder wherever we work; for improving the quality of life and for protecting the environment. Hans-Jürgen Wischhof: “The new global Group will forge leeway for creativity and innovation.” As you can see, within the expanding framework of our new corporate group we have already set ourselves a list of objectives. In this edition of the Unimog Journal you can read about how some of these objectives have already been met: DaimlerChrysler placed trucks with provisions at disposal for the desperately needy refugees in Kosovo, a move organised in conjunction with the Johanniter Unfall-Hilfe organisation; the young master carpenter who has boosted efficiency by restructuring procedures at his workshop around his new Unimog; or the ability of the Unimog to run on both roads and rails. But whatever the job and wherever it happens, they all just go to show how unique the Unimog System really is. Our aim, and our firm intention, is to keep you fully informed about this remarkable product. Sincerely Hans-Jürgen Wischhof UNIMOG JOURNAL 3 The “Octopus” washer Road surfaces are relatively easy to keep tidy with sweepers but how do you clean the sides and roofs of tunnels? The problem is cropping up more and more these days due to the common practice of “boxing in” new motorways and highways in order to reduce environmental noise. Schmidt-MULAG of Bad Peters-tal in Southern Germany have come up with the answer. Mounted on the front of a Heavy-duty Unimog is an articulated boom with a revolving, water-soaked brush at the end. On account of the weight and the outreach of the “Octopus” boom, it is not only attached to the quick-change mounting plate but also has an extra fixing adjacent to the Unimog’s front axle. A water tank is carried on the back of the vehicle together with a water pump driven from the rear power takeoff, supplying the pressure to scour the dirt off tunnel walls and roofs. Weighing in at 1200 kg and located towards the rear of the Unimog chassis, these items of equipment make an effective counterweight for good balance. This application illustrates several advantages of the Unimog System: • The front mounting facility with power takeoff – drives the hydraulic motor of the brush • The Unimog’s hydraulic system – supplies the hydraulicallypowered boom • Space and capacity for water and cleaning materials on the back of the vehicle • The rear power takeoff – drives the water pump • The high load-carrying capacity of the Unimog for this type of service. Out in the field these advantages mean that a Unimog equipped with a tunnel washer can clean several hundred metres of motorway tunnel in two days without any serious disruption to traffic. In the past crews have had to close one lane while working. The boom’s long outreach enables it to deal with all types of tunnel profile. From the road surface it can reach to a height of 8.30 m, the distance to the nearside tunnel wall will normally be 1.94 m and the full working range is 4.60 m. With the boom of the “Octopus” folded back along the length of the vehicle, the overall height of the unit is 3.90 m. Simply indispe The South Bavarian motorway maintenance authority has 1900 kilometres of autobahn to look after – and that means handling a variety of tasks all year round. Apart from 140 trucks to help them with their job, they also have eight U 2400 TGs and 45 other Unimogs, mostly U 1600s. The fleet of vehicles is based at 21 depots and the Unimog Journal was invited look round the Holzkirchen Depot on the A8 between Munich and Salzburg. Four Unimogs take care of the stretch between Munich-Ramersdorf and Bad Aibling which is very busy the whole year round. It also includes the famous, or perhaps infamous, Irschenberg, a particularly hilly section that has to be cleared of snow as quickly as possible in winter, otherwise it soon becomes impassable. With their excellent manoeuvrability, the Unimog with their snowploughs and gritting attachments are in their element, working their way past vehicles already stuck in the snow. Motorway services and parking areas also need clearing – more important winter work for the Unimog. In sum, the Unimog-plus-tunnel-washer configuration is highly manoeuvrable, versatile and compact. Yet another example of the exceptional economy and logistical advantages of the Unimog System! ❶ ❷ Sales Organisation Advertisement unique domain. As Heinz Bay puts it: “We’d be lost without our Unimog.” The authority keeps its Unimog for at least 10 years before selling them off. The vehicles are serviced at its own workshops, while all other work is entrusted to local Unimog distributors. For all its preference for Unimog from the standard range, there is one extra that the authority usually specifies for its new vehicles: air-conditioning – which must be a blessing for the drivers when there are miles of grass verges to mow in midsummer! pensable Fleet Manager Heinz Bay particularly appreciates the versatility of Unimog out in the field where the motorway crews use a wide variety of attachments including verge mowers, signpost washers, shredders and high-pressure rising equipment. Implements can be powered either mechanically from the front or rear power takeoffs, hydraulically from connectors provided on all the attachment mounts, or pneumatically from the vehicle’s compressed-air system – one of the great advantages of the Unimog System. In addition, one of the U 1600s is equipped with transferable steering so that it can be driven from either the left- or right-hand seat. All the Unimog on the maintenance fleet have hydrostatic transmission and for Heinz Bay they have become “simply indispensable”. Of course, he also uses trucks for some jobs; at the moment, for example, he has a Mercedes-Benz Actros 2031 AK on trial at the depot. But with all the Unimog’s implement and attachments, no conventional truck is ever going to edge it out of its 1 –2: For cleaning service areas, for example, the motorway maintenance crews use a highpressure cleaning attachment that can also be used for drain flushing. The water pump is hydraulically powered and the hose drum and pump are attached to the vehicle’s quick-change mounting plate. In this case the water is stored in a trailer-mounted tank pulled by the Unimog 3: The shredder attachment driven from the front power takeoff is used for shredding any tree cuttings on-site and blowing them back onto the embankment 4: One of the U 1600’s used by the motorways authority is equipped with transferable steering and can be quickly converted from left- to right-hand drive, making the driver’s job easier when working with different attachments ❸ ❹ The Deimanns of Arnsberg-Hüsten in Germany run a skip service. It’s a tough business as there is no shortage of local competition. All the more reason to find the most economical way of doing the job. Three enthusiasts and five Unimog The idea of using Unimog for transporting skips sprang from the need to be quicker on the job than the next man. This year, 1999, it will be exactly 25 years since Fritz Deimann first started his skip service. Before he had run a farm and was also involved in hauling long timber. Coming from a generation that believes in holding on to what you’ve got, it was only natural for Fritz Deimann to use his old tractor when he began offering skip services. Only when his “old faithful” reached the limits of its capacity did he decide the time had come for a Unimog. He bought his first Unimog, an U 406, back in 1975, and it is still in use despite having nearly 300,000 kilometres on the odometer. “We still need it, in the winter mostly, so that we can help our best custo- mers clear their yards and sites. The U 406 still does a fine job in that type of work,” explains Fritz Deimann’s younger son Friedel. Like their father, the two Deimann “boys“ can be found hard at work at the firm from early in the morning until late at night. The area where they live and work is close to the industrial heartlands of the Ruhr and there are countless mediumsized firms in the vicinity whose main business is subcontracting for the major industrial concerns in Dortmund, Bochum, Duisburg and Hamm. Deimann attends to all the skip needs of these local companies and also provides a disposal service for recyclable waste. Skips are left with customers and collected again when full. On Deimann’s own premises, the contents are transferred to larger containers which are then picked up by heavy trucks and taken away for recycling. Refuse is loaded into Right: Unimog tractor unit with 6 m3 skip and hydraulic tipper chassis for easy dumping Left: Unimog tractor unit with high-tip chassis and 8 m3 skip compacting containers and transported by Deimann to the regional landfill. So Deimann Container Services is both collector and disposer in one. Although the business is not exactly hi-tech, from an environmental point of view its activities provide an essential service whose growing importance Fritz Deimann was quick to recognise 25 years ago. Since then he has made a living out of looking after our environment. The only problem is the highly competitive nature of the market, since there are all too many people who think there is a quick buck to be made in this line of business. In fact it’s a very tough job which never stops, no matter what the weather condition is like. In this segment of the service sector where most trips are short, loads are heavy Sales Organisation and time is of the essence, everything has to be done as quickly as possible. It means that the vehicles used need to be strong, capable of all-terrain work and able to carry heavy loads. “That is why we opted for the Unimog tractor-units,” explained Georg Deimann, the third member of the Deimann clan, “because they are so much more manoeuvrable in town traffic than a truck and trailer. We do use Unimog hauling trailers, but mostly out in the country and for trips to the dump. And, because of the way we work, it’s very important for all our vehicles to be compatible with one another – which they are, thanks to their special Fasieco chassis.” In actual practice, that means skips can be picked up, put down and tipped with no manual effort whatsoever and without the driver even having to get out of his cab. Apart from its excellent relationship with Fasieco, Deimann Container Services also enjoys close cooperation with another local business partner – Unimog distributors Josef Kessler of Arnsberg-Hüsten – who will quickly deal with any servicing or repair work that the Deimanns cannot handle themselves. Three generations of Deimanns and four Unimog fans (left to right): Company founder Fritz Deimann, his younger son Friedel, grandson Frederik and elder son Georg (above) The Unimog tractor unit combined with the special skip chassis (right) makes the ideal rig for Deimann Container Services whose main customers are the industrial plants and building companies around Arnsberg Advertisement Advanced machines and equipment for all the main MUNICIPA L SERVICES Product Groups: Snow clearing machines Snow ploughs Grit spreaders Municipal equipment Sweepers Mowers SCHMIDT Winterdienst- und Kommunaltechnik GmbH D-79837 St. Blasien · Albtalstrasse 36 Tel. +49 7672/412-0 · Fax +49 7672/412230 · Telex 7721213sst d UNIMOG JOURNAL 7 Mighty Mouse 8 At an international symposium attended by customers from all over Europe, the Unimog Division of DaimlerChrysler AG put on an impressive demonstration of the capabilities of the Unimog in its roadrailer guise. In this sector, too, the Unimog Division enjoys proven partnerships with several equipment manufacturers. UNIMOG JOURNAL Road-railers: versatility As the name suggests, Unimog roadrailers can run on either roads or railway lines and these remarkable vehicles have been part of the company’s range since the early 1970s. The international symposium held in March of this year provided the ideal forum for the Unimog Division and eleven equipment manufacturers in the road-railer field to promote their wares. Over 500 people visited the 4-day event which was staged at the DaimlerChrysler car plant in Rastatt. This ultra-modern production plant and its extensive facilities provided the ideal setting against which to communicate a great deal of technical facts and figures – the main focus of the event. Haidan von Frankenberg, Head of Export Sales for the Unimog, neatly summed up the idea behind the symposium in his opening address: “We’re out to demonstrate road-railer technology and to ensure that our customers get all the technical data they need by Sales Organisation backing up the demonstrations with an interesting series of expert presentations.” The liberalisation of the transport market in Europe, the increase in the volume of goods traffic, the “new era” that is dawning in railway freight logistics and the creation of new service structures have all combined to offer new potential applications for Unimog road-railers. And just as the Unimog Division is already responding to these new developments, its customers and potential new users need to be kept in touch with the latest advances in a technology that has been developing steadily for 30 years and has profited enormously from close co-operation ity means economy between the Unimog Division itself and the equipment industry. The road-railer range begins with the medium-heavy U 1400s to U 1650s. These models have axles that can adapt to the standard gauges of most railway systems. Engine ratings extend from 100 kW/136 bhp to 155 kW/211 bhp. Wheelbases of 2650 and 3250 mm are available and the maximum gvw ranges from 7.5 to 10.5 t. When more powerful machines are needed there is the Heavy-duty Range which includes models from the U 2100 to the U 2450. In this case the available wheelbases are 2810 mm and 3250 mm, the gvw’s 10.6 to 14 t and the engine ratings 155 kW/211 bhp to 177 kW/240 bhp. Seventy percent of road-railer Unimog are used for shunting work in chemical plants, the auto industry (Audi, BMW and VW) and at the ports of Kopen (Slovakia), Lübeck (Germany), Stettin (Poland) and Tallinn (Estonia). Twenty percent are used for marshalling work and other jobs such as groove and channel cleaning on ordinary railway track, light rail networks, metros and tramlines. The Unimog is also attracting an increasing amount of interest from track maintenance companies as a basic workhorse for track cleaning, mowing and clear cutting. As an implement carrier for track-laying work, the road-railers can also be equipped with attachments such as excavators, drills and sleeper tamping equipment. One valuable point for potential users was made by long-time Unimog road-railer user, Holger Schmiers, the man in charge of road-railer vehicles in the logistics department at BASF in Ludwigshafen. In his presentation, Schmiers emphasised that: “Unimog road-railers are not meant to be a substitute for conventional locomotives but to provide versatile extra support for the transport process at specific points, as and when it is needed.” And that versatility was on display during the demonstration part of the event at Rastatt, illustrating to perfection that the road-railer Unimog is an ideal tool for industrial and railway services companies. They cost only half as much to buy as a comparable locomotive and the difference in the cost of upkeep is even greater. By making full use of the many implements and attachments available, users can derive considerable extra benefits from a machine whose enormous versatility stems from its remarkable ability to run on either road or rail. Visitors to the symposium at the DaimlerChrysler car plant in Rastatt were treated to an impressive practical demonstration by several different types of vehicle, showing off the full range of capabilities of the Unimog in road-railer form (left) Has anyone seen the Unimog? This U 1400 may look tiny against the eleven goods wagons but in terms of strength it’s gigantic (opposite page top) For industrial sites with their own railway sidings, for the transport business and for cargo-handling at ports, the Unimog has long been proving the ideal solution (below). There are now some 2,500 Unimogs around the world capably handling jobs ranging from shunting, marshalling and track-laying to hauling whole trains to nearby yards A delight for the eye, wherever you look: gaze up at the snow-capped mountain peaks or down at the blossoming meadows of the Berchtesgadener Land. Sunshine and snow, summer and winter are never far apart in this corner of the world. Ready for all weather conditions Mid-April in the German Alps: “Have we seen the last of the snow, now?” asks a tourist, hopefully. The local farmer shakes his head and gazes up at Mount Watzmann: “See that peak up there? Well, only when it’s completely covered in snow can we be sure it won’t snow again down here,” comes the astonishing reply, founded on generations of local knowledge. The highway maintenance depots around Lake Königssee are familiar with all the quirks of the local weather and well prepared for sudden changes, thanks to their Unimog. In Markt Berchtesgaden, for example, a fleet of 16 ‘Mogs were out and about virtually around the clock last 10 UNIMOG JOURNAL winter. Record snowfalls and record drift depths meant record working hours. In the town itself, as well as on the access roads to the ski slopes and trails, not to mention the roads to the Alpine farms, the Unimog were often the only means of clearing a way for locals and tourists alike. On gradients of up to 30 degrees and at heights of 1000 metres, the winter service crew under Depot Manager Klaus Rosenberger, gave an impressive demonstration of what man and machine can do. Their snow blowers, cutters, ploughs and gritters were often hard at work from dawn to dusk. Driver Michael Graitl is one of the tireless troop at the depot, actually turning out Sales Organisation Signs of spring in Berchtesgadener Land. Snow-capped peaks still tower over the towns and villages around Lake Königssee as they prepare for the coming summer season No peace for the Unimog in Markt Berchtesgaden: Clear those roads; chop that wood (left and above) well before dawn to load up “his” Unimog with grit and salt before clearing the roads for the morning traffic. Michael is a Unimog fan and loves getting the most out of the ‘Mog’s extensive range of abilities. “The Unimog is reliable and versatile; it’s as simple as that,” he states, qualities that don’t go amiss in the Bavarian Alps. Most days it is a race from one job to the next. “It’s a good thing you can just leave some implements attached to the Unimog while you handle other jobs – that really saves time,” reports Michael Graitl. “And when you do have to change them it only takes a couple of minutes.” Which is just as well, because the Unimog has a reputation for efficiency to defend. of the street scene in Markt Berchtesgaden and nearby Schönau and Bischofswiesen. The municipal ‘Mogs are not alone either: there are Unimog belonging to subcontractors and private operators as well. “If you want to be a big shot around here,” smiles Michael Graitl, “you’d better make sure you drive an Unimog!” “Winter service” it’s speed that counts: In next to no time the snow chains are fitted and the Unimog’s back on the road with a fresh load of salt To keep their vehicles in tip-top condition, the Bavarian crews carry out their own maintenance at their workshops. “And we’re rewarded by long service lives,” confirms Klaus Rosenberger. Finally, the winter draws to a close and the workshop is busy overhauling the Unimog, setting them up for their springtime and summer duties, armed with mowing, cutting, sweeping, cleaning and rinsing attachments. So whatever the weather, the Unimog are very much part UNIMOG JOURNAL 11 Sales Organisation There must be more to it than just a love for Unimog when a hard-headed North German carpenter spends over DM 400,000 to buy one. In Manfred Kühling’s case, it was the 3-way benefit he gets from his U 2450 L; in his everyday work that swung the balance. “For my entire working life” ❷ The total professionalism with which Manfred Kühling, master carpenter of Visbek in Northern Germany, conducts his business is not something you can take for granted from a man of his age. The carpentry company that he operates from his parents’ farm has been in business for eight years now and things are going very well indeed. Not that everything has fallen into his lap! In the early years, 12 to 14-hour days were almost the norm, but that hard work has proven worthwhile. Today, with a staff of 16, a CAD system for designing his roof structures and producing the drawings, and plenty of modern machinery to make up the roof timbers and other wood needed for fitting out interiors, he has established a very profitable company. This is immediately apparent from the solid outward appearance of the whole set-up. Needless to say, his U 2450 L also has its own covered parking space. “You see,” Manfred explained, “I expect to be using this vehicle and the crane for my entire working life.” What better proof could there be of the practical way this young businessman’s mind works? Only someone with no idea of how to run a company could still suspect that in buying a Unimog he was indulging an expensive hobby. Assuming that Manfred Kühling works for another 30 years and (with the more efficient methods that his Unimog makes ❶ ❸ possible) can erect three or four roofs a week, his investment plan cannot fail. Although the Unimog U 2450 L and the crane cost him around DM 450,000 he is already saving time and money. Every- ❶ Even the long wheelbase of the U 2450 L is not enough to get the MKG crane and its gear on board, so the chassis has been extended at the rear. In the background: proud owner Manfred Kühling ❷ Balancing on a narrow beam high up in the air is all part of the job for an experienced carpenter ❸ The struts at the front were also specially designed for the U 2450 L ❹ Huge coil springs allow the Unimog to ride smoothly over even the roughest of building sites 12 UNIMOG JOURNAL ❹ ❺ thing has changed since the Unimog arrived. As Manfred explains: “The tractor unit carries the crane and the trailer can handle up to 21 tonnes – and there’s still plenty of power to get us to the site reasonably quickly. And once on site, where space is usually very tight the Unimog’s manoeuvrability is a really valuable asset.” 1540 kg – which can be tripled by using extra tackle – it has become one of Manfred Kühling’s most valuable tools. Every year the crane is in action for between 800 and 850 hours. The crane and its winch were built by engineering company MKG. With an outreach of 19.5 m and a safe working load of ❻ ❺ The 14.5 tonne Unimog has no trouble at all hauling the 21-tonne trailer with a full load of sawn timber, prefabricated roof trusses and a dormer window to the site ❻ Everyday carpentry for Kühling. The crane hoists 10-metre rafters of fir or pine up onto the growing building, where they are quickly made fast UNIMOG JOURNAL 13 DaimlerChrysler supports Kosovo aid effort The Board of DaimlerChrysler has approved a “rapid response” measure designed to help the refugees fleeing from Kosovo. The company has placed three Actros tractor/trailer rigs at the disposal of the Johanniter Unfall-Hilfe charity organisation (JUH) to enable them to transport goods donated from various sources primarily food, powdered milk and sanitary/hygiene materials – to the town of Skopje and to refugee camps in neighbouring countries. The Red Cross too has received help from the world’s largest commercial vehicle manufacturer: in response to the “We Want to Help” programme, broadcast on German television, a Unimog has been made available to this most famous of international charities. U·N·I·S Thanks to its previous involvement in Kosovo, the JUH already has an organisational set-up and infrastructure in place. The three Actros tractor units are hauling soft-top trailers and are being provided by Mercedes-Benz Charterway. They are marked with the words “Kosovo Aid” – an initiative by Johanniter Unfall-Hilfe and DaimlerChrysler” (photo). One load has already arrived in the crisis region and two more are due to arrive before the end of May. The drivers of the vehicles are being provided by the JUH. The first load to Skopje also included more than 600 cuddly toys donated by the staff of DaimlerChrysler and radio listeners in Southwest Germany. Advertisement High-pressure cleaning and the Unimog Problem-solving using combination rigs with … ... a front-mounted boom attachment for cleaning roads and surfaces, acoustic barriers and tunnels ... a front-mounted rotary sweeper attachment for cleaning building-site and landfill exits and for intermediate tarmac cleaning ... water tank capacity up to 7000 l ... a hot water system ... high-pressure spray guns with jet or fan spray (e.g. for façade cleaning) or with a sandblasting attachment (e.g. for removing rust and graffiti) Joachim Leistikow GmbH Altkönigstrasse 2 D-61138 Niederdorfelden Tel. +49 6101 / 5364-0 Fax. +49 6101 / 33461 S·C·O·P·E Cargo tractor for Stockholm U 90 turbo for Innsbruck Airport The operating company of Stockholm’s Arlanda International Airport has found an interesting role for the Unimog. Supplied by Swedish General Distributors SWEDMOG AB in Huskvarna, the airport’s U 1400 features a torque converter and a remote control system for reversing, and was purchased to handle the movement of heavy cargo trailers. The Unimog has to be able to perform its daily duties – loading and unloading cargo aircrafts – without a hiccup whatever the weather and through the rigours Scandinavian winters. With up to ten cargo trailers in line (photo) the Unimog may find itself towing as much as 40 tonnes. According to the customer, the key factors that led them to buy a Unimog were the vehicle’s combination of performance and reliability, coupled with the vital economy factor and a long service life. A Unimog U 90 with snow plough and gritter attachment was recently handed over to Innsbruck Airport operators Tiroler Flughafenbetriebsgesellschaft. Destined for yearround service, the Unimog will also handle other maintenance tasks around the airport. As our photo shows, the handover was staged to perfection, all the way to the sunshine on the Tyrolean peaks. The keys were presented to Managing Director Reinhold Falch by Anton Bucek from Unimog distributors Pappas. Advertisement DÜCKER UNIMOG JOURNAL 15 PBU/VM 6808.0010.02 06/99
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