Partner Article
Engineering firm clinches £4m contracts in China and Germany
Holroyd Precision, a specialist machine tool design, manufacture and supply firm based in Milnrow, Rochdale, has secured machine orders totalling more than £4 million from leading air compressor manufacturers in China and Germany.
Holroyd Precision is a division of UK-based Precision Technologies Group (PTG).
Valued at £3.3 million, the order from China is for a Holroyd 8EX rotor milling machine that is capable of milling profiles of up to 850 mm in diameter, and a Holroyd TG350E (350mm diameter capability) rotor grinding machine. The TG350E rotor grinding machine will be shipped in December 2013; the 8EX rotor milling machine will follow in early 2014. The order from Germany is for a Holroyd 3EX-R rotor milling machine. Valued at £1 million, it has a 350 mm maximum diameter capability and will be used by a premier air compressor manufacturer for the milling of screw profiles. In addition to machines, the China order takes in associated technology and know-how. Holroyd will provide compressor designs and the latest high efficiency rotor profiles, while to assist the Chinese customer in ongoing profile and compressor development, it has also been arranged for their profile development team to attend City University, London - Holroyd Precision’s technology partner in compressor development, for tutoring in compressor design. As an additional customer benefit, the TG350E rotor grinding machine will be supplied with the Holroyd Profile Management System (HPMS) - a desktop profile manufacturing and design tool that is recognised globally as providing unrivalled profile, clearance and tool development capabilities. Holroyd precision’s sales manager, Steven Benn. said: “We are delighted to have been asked to supply our leading-edge milling and grinding technologies to the organisations concerned.
“Holroyd EX and TG models are renowned for their capabilities across applications as wide ranging as air conditioning, superchargers, gas screw compressors and hydraulic pumps.”
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Simon Malia .
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