
Siguiente nivel - Producción a alta velocidad
Con una producción anual de hasta 900.000 m³, confiabilidad absoluta y calidad de producto insuperable, el ContiRoll® se ha convertido en el estándar en la producción continua de tableros. Pero Siempelkamp no se ha dormido sobre los laureles y lanza una actualización de vanguardia: una prensa de alimentación recién desarrollada, tecnología de punta en accionamientos e instrumentación, simulación y control de procesos han elevado el ContiRoll® a nuevas alturas: aumento de la producción de hasta el 30%, tiempos de funcionamiento más altos de la máquina, requisitos de mantenimiento minimizados, rendimiento de alta precisión y cualidades del producto que se han incrementado nuevamente con el potencial de realizar aún más ahorros en materiales y consumo de energía – todo a velocidades de operación confiables de 2.500 milímetros por segundo.
En resumen: ¡han llegado las ContiRoll® Generation 9 y ContiRoll® Generation 9 NEO!
Para mayor informacion: http://siempelkamp.vetas.com

IT MAY INTEREST YOU

Wood supply as raw material is essential for the world carpentry industry and wood processing, which will meet in Ligna 2025 in Hannover from May 26 to 30. As a reflection of this, the Forest Section of the world leading fair will show all aspects of the optimized methods for the use of wood. Modern -scale modern forest machinery, mobile sawmills, smart logistics and safe transport - such as technical pioneers in the use of wood as material and energy - will be the protagonists, together with the crucial efforts to preserve forests as a sustainable source of raw materials for future generations and prepare them for the challenges of the future.

Elegant, ecological and resistant: the wood treated with the millenary technique called Yakisugi challenges the weather and the passage of time. In the world of design and construction, a Japanese ancestral technique is gaining prominence. This is the Yakisugi (also known as Shou Sugi Ban), a method that consists in burning the surface of the wood to make it more resistant and attractive. Although it may seem contradictory, exposing wood to fire gives natural protection against moisture, insects and deterioration over time.

It was created in 1881 and became a very popular place during the following decades. However, when the tree fell at the close of the 1960s, everything changed. Wawona tree was the name that had a tourist attraction from the United States, which remained standing from 1881 to 1969 in Mariposa Grove, Yosemite National Park, California.