NCK (Newton Chambers Koehring), started as a subsidiary of Newton, Chambers & Company, a large engineering company based in Sheffield, England. They produced the range of agricultural equipment, skimmers, , cranes and that were renowned for high quality and long life, typically over 20 years. Many NCK machines continue to operate worldwide.
The company was taken over in 1972 by the holding company Central and Sheerwood. NCK later was sold to Robert Maxwell's media group as part of a wider deal, but Maxwell was not interested in cranes and NCK became inactive. Cliffe Holdings then bought the company, later Staffordshire Public Works bought the company in 1997 after it fell again into receivership.
NCK launched a new model, the 90T HC90 Astra crane in 2000 but it was not successful, 3 units were manufactured and are owned by Delden CSE Ltd as part of their hire fleet. The only other UK crawler crane business, Ruston-Bucyrus, also stopped manufacture in 2009. The last crawler crane supplied by NCK was a Nova in 2001. SPW now runs an active spares and overhaul business for its cranes Crawler manufacturer NCK fails again The Independent Magazine of the Cranes industry (2010). Retrieved 1 August 2010 and fabricates NCK plant to order as well as manufacturing traffic control and filtration equipment.
|
|