The Sunday Telegraph

This machine could end the scourge of our nation: potholes

- By Mike Wright

A NEW pothole-busting machine being used by councils can fill in six times as many holes an hour as gangs of workers.

JCB’s new PotholePro has repaired more potholes in its first three months of trials than the average council fills in a year, according to the digger company.

The machine is the passion project of the company’s chairman, Lord Bamford, who has said the country has become “fixated” with the issue of patching up its pockmarked roads.

It comes as the country now faces an estimated £10billion repair bill to complete all the works needed on the crumbling road network.

Last month, the RAC warned that parts of Britain’s roads now resembled the “surface of the Moon” after their state had deteriorat­ed significan­tly following a particular­ly cold winter.

Councils use gangs of workers to fill in potholes as they appear, with works taking up to an hour.

Workers can use hand tools such as jackhammer­s or a collection of up to three different machines to cut a clean

‘Our country is fixated on this dreadful problem and as a manufactur­er I want to find a solution’

hole and clear out the damaged asphalt, before pouring in new Tarmac.

JCB has designed its new £165,000 machine so it can cut, crop and clean a new hole in less than eight minutes, allowing workers to pour the new tarmac immediatel­y.

The vehicle also has a top speed of 24mph so it can be driven to where works are needed.

Ben Rawding, a product manager for JCB, said the company had focused on developing a new technology to speed up pothole repair as it felt Britain was reaching a “breaking point” with the state of its roads.

He said: “It is a massive innovation in the industry as the ways to fix potholes have stayed pretty static in the last 20 to 25 years.

“That’s really why we have focused on the JCB Pothole Pro as a big change.

“One of the unique elements that makes it so different is being able to do the three processes of cutting, cropping and cleaning with one machine.”

Since the Pro was first unveiled in January, the company has been trialling it on roads across the country.

It has filled in more than 16,500 potholes over the last few months.

Councils on average fill in around 10,000 over a year.

Speaking back in January, Lord Bamford said he had been moved to design the machine after seeing the decline in the state of Britain’s roads.

He said: “Potholes really are the scourge of our nation. Our country is quite rightly fixated on this dreadful problem and as a British manufactur­er I am fixated on finding a solution.

“We simply cannot allow our road network to continue to be blighted by potholes.”

JCB has a deal with Stoke-on-Trent council to use the machine and is in talks with a number of other authoritie­s over licensing the machine.

Earlier this year, the Government promised to give councils an extra £500million to help tackle the growing pothole problem.

However, the Asphalt Industry Alliance (AIA), which represents the road repairs industry, now estimates the total cost of the UK’s repairs backlog to be around £10.4 billion. The body warned that filling in potholes, while necessary, was most often a short-term remedy and that many of the UK’s roads now needed completely resurfacin­g.

Rick Green, the AIA’s chairman, said: “Potholes and pothole repairs are the symptoms of an underfunde­d network, where hard-pressed highway teams continue to have to make tough decisions between short-term fixes and long-term structural improvemen­ts – so they can keep all of their networks functionin­g.”

He added: “Repeatedly filling in potholes is essentiall­y a failure as it does nothing to improve the resilience of the network.”

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 ??  ?? JCB’s new PotholePro can cut, crop and clean a new hole in less than eight minutes, allowing workers to pour the new tarmac immediatel­y
JCB’s new PotholePro can cut, crop and clean a new hole in less than eight minutes, allowing workers to pour the new tarmac immediatel­y
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