BulldozerD11 wrote:(the pictures appearing in reverse order in preview has caught me out before with the captions as well )
Only in the preview?
Have to check that!
BulldozerD11 wrote:(the pictures appearing in reverse order in preview has caught me out before with the captions as well )
Gavin Phillips wrote:Calling all Wirtgen/road planer enthusiasts!
URL of the original image: http://image85.webshots.com/85/0/28/44/2570028440056294567lyiPYl_fs.jpg
Just snapped this one this morning. It seems quite regular here to paint over anything with the model number. I'm sure its a conspiracy to keep us people who have an interest in machinery guessing at what we're looking at.
Anyway; its not a huge machine by any standards. The traffic cones are a decent scale to size it up against I suppose.
Any ideas?
Best regards
Gavin
Gavin Phillips wrote:Calling all Wirtgen/road planer enthusiasts!
URL of the original image: http://image85.webshots.com/85/0/28/44/2570028440056294567lyiPYl_fs.jpg
Just snapped this one this morning. It seems quite regular here to paint over anything with the model number. I'm sure its a conspiracy to keep us people who have an interest in machinery guessing at what we're looking at.
Anyway; its not a huge machine by any standards. The traffic cones are a decent scale to size it up against I suppose.
Any ideas?
Best regards
Gavin
pbws1226 wrote:Hi I'm a planner fitter for NRP it is a W2200
Hutch wrote:Hi Richard
Have a look at the Roadtec website they have planers that will cut up to 7 metres wide with extensions to the cutting drum and from what ive been told their first planer was based on the design of a British planer called a Simec that was made in Cramlington near Newcastle, of which they bought the manufacturing rights.Only two were built in Britain,one being sold to the original Power Plane and the other to a customer in America.They were in someways ahead of their time but suffered from reliability problems and lack of development this partly caused the demise of Power Plane and along with most of Power Planes kit the Simec ended up being owned by TE Beach.
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