NEWS ITEM ....
PEORIA - Caterpillar Inc. said Friday (7th March 2008) it will again set a standard when it produces the first electric drive track-type tractor in its bulldozer line of equipment.
Responding to customer demand for a machine that is more efficient and economical, Caterpillar said the new D7E, which will be built in East Peoria, is being tested internally and will be tested by customers all over the world before debuting commercially in 2009.
"This is customer-driven innovation," said Caterpillar spokeswoman Kate Kenny.
The D7 already is made in East Peoria, Kenny said, so the company does not expect there will be any effect on area manufacturing jobs with the new machine.
The D7E will be unveiled at the construction equipment exposition CONEXPO/CON-AGG 2008 in Las Vegas this week.
Caterpillar on Friday made two announcements leading to the exposition, which opens Tuesday and continues through this coming week.
Aside from the D7E, Caterpillar also said it plans to meet the federal government's next emissions requirements, the Tier 4 requirements coming in 2011, with its trademark ACERT technology.
Caterpillar has met U.S. Environmental Protection Agency standards with ACERT the last several years on all of its truck and machinery engines.
"We will provide an industry leading technology solution to meet the needs of our global customer base in all the markets we serve," said Group President Doug Oberhelman. "Caterpillar is ready to provide its machine and industrial customers around the world with the broadest product range, the most extensive technology expertise, collaborative design processes, demonstrated system integration
experience and unequaled product support."
Kenny said the purpose of the announcement "is more or less to let the world know we won't be using any other technology that any of our competitors use. We are letting the world know we continue to have confidence in ACERT."
The D7E will mark the first significant change in Caterpillar earthmoving equipment in several years.
The electric drive system will give the machine "an unmatched balance of power, efficiency, control and maneuverability," the company said in a news release. It said the D7E will do more work and consume less fuel and parts than existing machines, helping customers to lower costs.
"The D7E offers a quantum leap in customer value through significant productivity increases and reduced owning and operating costs," said Mark Pflederer, vice president of Caterpillar's Heavy Construction & Mining Division. "This is another example of Caterpillar's global technology leadership and commitment to sustainable innovation which is not only good for our customers' economics, but the environment as well."
The D7E is powered by a Cat C9 engine, but a traditional mechanical transmission is not needed, because the variable speed electric motors serve the function of a continuously variable transmission.
The electric drive train has 60 percent fewer moving parts compared to previous D7s. The electric system also provides power to auxiliary components so no engine belts are needed.
"From an environmental sustainability perspective, the D7E uses substantially less fuel per hour - dramatically reducing the amount of carbon dioxide emissions," said Group President Stu Levenick, in a release.
"This revolutionary design consumes fewer resources over its working life than any other track-type tractor in its class. All major components are engineered to be rebuilt or reused in the future."