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Jul 8, 2014

TRUCKMAKERS NEWS * Sweden: Scania

* Building a heavy truck: The Scania R 730 Streamline

Södertälje,Sweden -Video from YouTube -7 July 2014: -- Scania is a leading manufacturer of heavy trucks and buses as well as industrial and marine engines. The company is a global one with operations in Europe, Latin America, Asia, Africa and Australia... Scania is the world’s third largest make for heavy trucks and the world’s third largest make in the heavy bus segment... Scania operates in about 100 countries and has more than 41,000 employees. Of these, around 17,600 work in sales and service, some 12,800 in production, about 3,400 with research and development... Now, let us to show as how are built a heavy truck: The Scania R 730 Streamline:

Oct 23, 2013: -- This time-lapse video shows a Scania R 730 Streamline being built from the ground up and subsequently delivered to the customer in Germany... Scania trucks are built using a modular product system. This allows Scania to build nearly any type of truck from a limited number of building blocks. The system ensures customers get exactly the right vehicle for their transport needs. It also means they have access to parts, as well as fast, reliable service, no matter where they are in the world... As soon as a truck is ordered, a number of processes begin. At Scania's various production units, work begins on the axles, cab, engine, frame and gearbox. Once these components are completed they are delivered to the chassis assembly line closest to the vehicle's final destination. Scania chassis assembly lines are located in Södertälje in Sweden, Angers in France, São Bernardo do Campo in Brazil and in Zwolle in the Netherlands... This video, shot on location in Zwolle, shows the assembly of a R 730 V8 truck. The process typically takes seven hours and involves some 500 people located at 65 stations along the assembly line... Once a truck leaves the assembly line, the process of adding any extras items -- for example, options requested by the customer -- can begin. This can take anything from a couple of hours to several days. It generally takes only eight weeks from the time a truck is ordered to the time the completed vehicle is delivered to the customer...

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