Large milling machines on the fast lane
After the race, Conway returned to Wembley very early in the morning of 17 December. A team of 16 worked round the clock for three days this time to remove the 4,400 tons of asphalt again prior to handing the pitch back to the Wembley Stadium grounds men in top condition. The key equipment consisted of two cold milling machines, a W 2000 and W 2100, both of which loaded into a 30 strong fleet of 20- ton capacity trucks. Both milling machines were operating at full speed, taking out in one pass the two binder layers, the wearing course and the base layer. The layer thicknesses varied between 11 cm up to a maximum of 30 cm. Each of the high-performance milling machines was able to load a 20-ton truck in about 3 minutes. As a matter of the company’s policy – Conway won the “Legacy Award for Sustainability” last year – the 4,400 tons of milled material were recycled and then reused in the company’s other contracts. “Our W 2000 and W 2100 are high-production machines and proved ideal for the Wembley contract,” adds Nick Burman. “We have several Wirtgen milling machines that we mainly use for big projects in London where we need to take out and put material back down in the same shift to get the road open for traffic the following morning.” “There’s nothing to beat Wirtgen milling machines, and my W 2000 is a great machine and very reliable for the type of work we do,” says W 2000 operator Dave Monk. “It has a very good steering lock and is extremely manoeuvrable, so that it can get into some very tight places.”