After taking two Bell Equipment wheeled loaders on trial, Marshalls Plc, has committed to the long term lease of both machines after receiving a complete seal of approval from its drivers on the loaders’ quality.

Marshalls, which manufactures a wide range of natural stone and innovative concrete hard landscaping products, decided to review its loading operations at one of its main sites at Brookfoot in Halifax. While its drivers have been loyal to familiar brands of loader in the past, Marshalls was interested in testing their reaction to a change of brand.
This process included a one week trial of a Bell Equipment’s 1706 Wheeled Loader alongside models from other manufacturers. After the trials were complete the drivers ranked Bell higher than the other loaders showing a distinct preference for the Bell loader’s performance and cab specification.

Jonathan Galvin, Senior Group Buyer at Marshalls, explains more: “As a the market leader in the hard landscaping industry, we are extremely reliant on superior earth moving equipment that will stand up to the demands required at our numerous operations around the country.

“Quality and reliability are critical components in our machine selection process, as any equipment used needs to meet the challenge of materials handling across our extensive product range. However it’s our drivers that have the soundest knowledge of how machines really perform when put to the test.

“We want our operatives to feel confident in the capabilities of the equipment they use as well as its ergonomic aspects, so we enabled a process of feedback whereby machine selection decisions can be made on a site specific basis in conjunction with looking at the lifetime cost of running the machines (including maintenance and fuel burn). Over the years we’ve put a number of wheeled loaders from different manufacturers through their paces – all of which have offered quality, but not necessarily cost effectiveness.”

When the latest opportunity for change arose at the Brookfoot operation in Halifax, Bell Equipment offered its 1706 Wheeled Loader on trial and it was this machine – which benefits from the quality and power of a John Deere engine, as well as exceptional fuel efficiency – that came out on top, having been rated the preferred loader of the trial models by the operators.

Jonathan says more: “It was a unilateral choice to select the Bell machine. Our drivers were impressed with so many of its aspects, including the more powerful, longer arms that enables operators to effortlessly reach from the aggregate bays into tall batching plant hoppers, and the ergonomic cab that offers greater, practical comfort.
“In addition, this invaluable ‘trial’ exercise has been a superb opportunity to test what’s actually out on the market at present, and how machines really compare, as well as the options to purchase or hire.”

The successful selection of the machine at the Halifax operation subsequently led to Marshalls requesting a similar demonstration trial its Sittingbourne operation in Kent, where drivers were equally impressed with the equipment, and once more, a Bell Wheeled Loader was introduced as the latest addition to the fleet.

Votes: 0
E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of Landscape Juice Network to add comments!

Join Landscape Juice Network

Open forum activity

John F replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"Privacy perhaps  or to prevent a pet from escaping through the neighbours garden .
If it's for mobility a handrail would suffice . 
 "
2 hours ago
Jonathan Davidson replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"My first question would be WHY!
Why on earth would someone want a fence down the middle of a narrow shared footpath of steps...... it seriously starts to limit what can and cant be moved up and down the steps in the future what with the exitsting…"
2 hours ago
Stuart @ Eco Garden Maintenance updated their profile
2 hours ago
Billybop replied to robert pryor's discussion Battery hedgcutter advice
"The higher voltage (after a certain point) doesn't necessarily mean a faster stroke rate. For fine conifer and the like I use a Stihl HSA94T (older version of the HSA130T) which is incredibly fast, in fact I can't even cope with it on the highest of…"
4 hours ago
The Wall replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"Personally i think you are opening a can of worms, i would hazard a guess that somewhere in the title deeds you can not put a fence down there as both parties are responsable for the up keep of the steps, if you had asked me to quote i would walk…"
5 hours ago
Will Roberts replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"If the fence has to go on top of the concrete steps I'd put up a continuous post and rail feather edge fence with the posts in holes cut through the concrete. (I hate using metpost supports) You won't need as many post holes as you would using…"
9 hours ago
robert pryor replied to robert pryor's discussion Battery hedgcutter advice
"I’m not sure thats the case with all. As I said the stihl petrol is 4.7 kg minus petrol. A lot of battery models I’ve been looking at come in at under 4kg inc battery, also the run times dont look bad if you’ve a 5AH battery. Anyway as Im now only…"
9 hours ago
Sam Bainbridge replied to Andrew Bentley's discussion Finding work
"Parish magazine and recommendations are the only way if you expect to be fully booked in a.month think again. It takes time and effort you have to be better than the rest to recommendations or cheaper. I'd go cheaper at the start then as you fill up…"
12 hours ago
Ian Harvey replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"What is the width of the steps (side to side)? They don't look very wide, and putting a fence in the middle might make the steps unusable for both parties. You could spend a lot of time and money doing this, only to have your neighbour legally…"
14 hours ago
Peel Projects updated their profile
22 hours ago
Andrew Bentley and Honey Badger are now friends
PRO
yesterday
Adam Woods replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"ok.. I thought it was along the hedge line... in the middle of the steps i agree, my idea isnt going to work"
yesterday
Ben Huntington replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"The boundary line runs down the centre of these steps so esstentially it will run from the gap between the window/patio door right down the steps to where the bin is on picture 2"
yesterday
Ben Huntington replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"Thanks for your response but we definetly want fencing instead of a hedge"
yesterday
Ben Huntington replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"Does this give you the view you need?"
yesterday
Tim Bucknall replied to Ben Huntington's discussion Advice: Fencing down Concrete Steps
"How are you going to put a hedge down the centre of concrete steps?"
yesterday
More…

Lawn Water Conserver

A question for those offering lawn treatments. Does anyone use a specific product, separate to their normal treatments, that's specifically used when we have long, dry periods? Can anyone recommend a good product? I imagine it would likely be a…

Read more…
0 Replies
Views: 18