Portable batcher shows versatility: distributor looks at mining opportunities.

AuthorLarmour, Adelle
PositionMINING

The CARMIX concrete mixer is a "must-have" for Norm Maurice, president of Sudbury's CARMIX Canada, Paramount Construction and Atlas Concrete Driveways.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Not only has he incorporated the Italian-made compact concrete mixer into his construction and driveway businesses, he will not run his companies without one.

The three standalone businesses serve the residential, commercial and industrial sectors throughout Ontario, the majority being in Northern Ontario. Atlas Concrete Driveways, the newest addition, was created this past spring due to concern over Vale's long and drawn-out strike.

Entrepreneurial blood runs strong in Maurice's veins, who has remained self-employed since he worked for his father as a teenager raising houses. This specialty continues to be an integral part of his foundation business.

For three years, he eyeballed the portable batch plant/cement mixer at the Las Vegas World of Concrete trade show. Once he decided how he would use the machine in his business, he brought it to Sudbury in 2005. He put it through its paces to make sure the product was everything it touted. Confident in the machine's capabilities, Maurice began selling the machines in 2008.

As the only distributor in Canada, he has actively sought out companies to sell the product. To date, he has sold 10 machines and found two dealerships, one in Montreal and one in southern Ontario. He is actively seeking out more.

CARMIX is a batching plant and mixer in one portable unit, which ranges in size from one cubic metre to 5.5 cubic metres. Materials like granulars, powder and water are mixed on site. It has its own water pump and water gauge; larger units also have a scale, which measures and weighs the materials entering the drum to ensure a consistent mix. Its compact size and all-wheel drive mean it can go to sites where a larger concrete mixer cannot.

"The 5.5-cubic-metre model has poured up to 120 cubic metres in one day," Maurice said, similar to the standard mixers.

In European countries, these machines have been used for extensive projects like large hydro dams, industrial complexes, shopping plazas and residential homes for applications such as footings, poured foundations, floors, sidewalks, driveways, curbs and pools.

Timing plays a critical role when pouring concrete. Once batched, the driver only has one hour to transport the mix. After that, the concrete begins to lose its integrity.

"Often for us, the truck would be almost an...

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