You're looking at a machine that's basically a 13-16 ton diesel vibratory hammer on tracks, with a 75-110kW motor pushing 160-550kN.m of torque through DTH, auger, or screw drilling—we see these mostly on solar farms or borehole jobs where you need 5-30m depth and holes over 300mm wide.
Most buyers ask about the track width first, and it's 600mm, which is fine for soft ground but you'll want mats if you're on real muck—also the piling speed is 7-10m/min in decent soil, but don't expect that in rock without a pre-drill.

We usually have stock on the common configs, but if you want a custom build (say a different motor or a torque split you've worked out), lead time is about 20 days or so—confirm before ordering because teh 85-151kw engine option can shift availability.
Bulk pricing is where it gets interesting: if you take three or more units, we knock off roughly 8-12% depending on spec, and we'll throw in a spare set of vibro weights—nobody thinks to ask about those, but they wear out after about 500 hours of continuous use in abrasive soils.

Certifcation is CS, not CE or ISO, so if your site requires specific standdard, check with your inspector first—we can provide COAs on motor and hydraulic components, but we don't have third-party testing for the full assembly.
Anyway, lead times for a single unit run about 4-6 weeks from deposit, and we ship FOB form our yard, so you'll handle customs clearance—one thing buyers don't always catch is the fuel consumption, which is roughly 18-25L/hr at full load.
That torque range means the machine can handle everything from light micro pile work at 160kN.m up to heavy borehole drilling at 550kN.m. You just adjust based on the soil and pile size you're working with.
Yes, the 12-month warranty is standard from the factory. It covers manufacturing defects on key components like the engine and hydraulic system, but normal wear parts like drill bits and tracks are excluded.
Absolutely, we can share the CS certification documents upfront. Just ask your sales rep, and they'll email you the scanned copies for review before you commit.
For a first trial, we usually do a minimum of 1 unit. That way you can run it on your solar pile or borehole project and see how it performs before ordering more.
It depends on your soil. DTH is best for hard rock, auger works in clay or mixed soils, and screw is great for loose or sandy ground. We can help you pick based on your site conditions.