Sollevatore telescopico Edilizia Dieci

A construction telehandler for Korean skyscrapers

Confined spaces and great heights: our Pegasus telehandler is at its best on busy South Korean construction sites

How the Pegasus telehandler can replace a fixed crane

For the 2019 Championship, the building of the VIP grandstand was entrusted to the Nüssli Group, a company specialising in the construction of temporary structures for major international events. For the Lauberhornrennen, Nüssli successfully used our Pegasus 40.25 construction telehandler in place of a conventional crane, thereby improving its productivity in various ways.

Where the grass is greener on every side

If you have ever travelled in the northeast of the United Kingdom, you may have seen huge expanses of well-tended grassland, like an English lawn but spanning numerous acres!
telehandler Agri

One telehandler and 200 hectares of intensive farmland: the plain of Coquimbo

In the plains of Chile, a telehandler is helping farmers to move numerous vegetable crops that need to be shipped and sorted as quickly as possible.
Agri telehandlers Dieci

How 2 Agri telehandlers handle 40,000 tonnes of fodder every month

In one of Poland’s largest livestock farms, two Dieci telehandlers work 20 hours a day moving hundreds of tonnes of cereals: agility and comfort are not an option!

Eima 2018: a dream edition.

Just days since it ended, Eima International 2018 is already being described as a dream edition. The event attracted over 300,000 visitors, mostly young people attracted by the cutting-edge technology of the agricultural machines on display, which cemented the exhibition’s reputation as a marker of progress and advancement...
Pegasus Dieci telehandlers

Telehandlers in extreme conditions: Rosebel mine

Pegasus telescopic handlers have been chosen to help maintain a Suriname gold mine, thanks above all to their robustness and versatility.

An almost agricultural Pegasus

We often hear the Amazon Basin described as the "Green Lung of the World"; a vast biological sanctuary of almost 7 million square kilometres, necessary for maintaining the ecological balance of the entire planet.

Never too high

Hessen is rightly considered the greenest region of Germany: as much as 42% of its territory, consisting mainly of hills and low mountain ranges, is covered by forests. The region is also home to numerous rivers (the Fulda, the Lahn, the Eder, the Weser, the Rhine and the Main) and many well-tended gardens that surround both historic buildings and private homes.

A marine Agri Max!

Norway is synonymous with sailors: since the days of the Vikings, the Norwegians have always crossed the seas, and continue to do so in their free time! They undoubtedly benefit from over 21,000 kilometres of jagged coastline, interspersed with countless fjords and characteristic, small rocky islands called skerries.