BelAZ 75710

BelAZ 75710

A Belarusian stamp depicting the BelAz 75710
Overview
Type Haul Truck
Manufacturer BelAZ
Production 2013-present
Assembly Zhodzina, Belarus
Body and chassis
Class Ultra Class
Layout Front-engine, Four-wheel drive
Powertrain
Engine 2 × MTU DD16V4000 V16 diesel
Transmission Siemens MMT500
Dimensions
Wheelbase 8 m (26 ft)
Length 20.6 m (68 ft)
Width 9.87 m (32 ft)
Height 8.165 m (27 ft)
Curb weight 360000 kg (793664 lb)

The BelAZ 75710 is an ultra class haul truck manufactured in Belarus by BelAZ. As of 2016, it is the world's largest, highest payload capacity haul truck.

Design

The BelAz 75710 has a conventional two-axle setup but the wheels are doubled, four to an axle, like a scaled-up International Payhauler 350. For this reason it needs eight 59/80R63 tires.[1] It also has four-wheel drive and four-wheel hydraulic steering which is unusual. It has a turning radius of about 20 meters.

The 75710 can carry a 450 metric ton (496 short ton) load.[2] With an empty weight of 360 tonnes, it is much more heavily built than the previous model, which weighed 240 tonnes when empty.[3] It is 20.6 meters long, 8.16 meters high, and 9.87 meters wide. The bed is relatively shallow, limiting the volume of material that can be carried.

Instead of a single engine, the Siemens MMT 500 drive system is powered by two 65-litre 16-cylinder diesel engines, each with 2,300 horsepower. These are coupled to two AC alternators and four AC traction motors (two in each axle).[4] Fuel consumption (according to company data) is 198 g/kWh per engine, with option to run on only one if carrying less than capacity loads. Maximum speed is 64 km/h, and economy maximum speed (when fully loaded and on a 10% gradient) is 40 km/h.[5] The complex propulsion system, in addition to the shallow bed, doubled tires, and very heavy empty weight, has led to concerns about operating efficiency.

Project history

BelAZ produces the 75710 in a new facility constructed by Soligorsk Construction Trust No. 3. Overall, BelAz has invested $644 million in increasing its total production capacity.[6] The first truck was delivered to the Kuznetsk Basin in 2013.

Previously the world's largest haul trucks were Bucyrus MT6300AC, Liebherr T 282B and Caterpillar 797F ultra-class trucks, with load capacities of 400 short tons.[7]

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.