Tsurumi partners with Dragflow

Now working together, pump maker Tsurumi and Italy’s Dragflow join forces to offer more options for moving water, handling thick mixtures, and managing silt. Their combined reach touches jobs in building work, digging operations, and public works projects. From drainage to muck removal, the pairing brings varied tools where they’re needed most.

From Japan, Tsurumi started in 1924, building tough submersible pumps that handle rough jobs. These machines move liquid thick with solids, fitting tightly into heavy work zones like mines or dig sites. Instead of backing off harsh conditions, their gear leans into them – dewatering job lots, pushing pressure limits, cleaning up leftover flows, shifting sludge loads. Hundreds of versions exist, each shaped for a specific grind. Where waste runs messy and tasks demand grit, these units show up ready. Expertise from both sides links through shared ground: wet messes packed with solid stuff.

Out in the slurry world, Dragflow focuses on tough, gritty mixes that wear down most machines. Equipment floats where it needs to go – ports, rivers, even mine sites – guided without a person onboard. Dredging setups make up a big part of what they offer. These tools move heavy muck in places like reservoirs or industrial zones. Remote operation keeps workers out of risky spots while work gets done.

Water must be removed on most big job sites, yet mud, grit, and debris often need moving too. This collaboration lets Tsurumi keep improving pumps for flooded areas underwater work. From their side, Dragflow brings gear built strong enough to handle thick mixtures packed with solids. Together, they say, the combined systems cover more ground than either could alone.

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