SCIENTIFIC MONITORING OF THE OFFER
Key to the success of MAN ecoline was the cooperation between all those experts and the collaboration with the specialist departments – including technology, documentation, controlling, order management, sales, product management and service organisation. “It was also important that we organised the supply of reconditioned parts across the whole range and were thus able to provide our customers with a one-stop-shop,” explains Lukaschtik. “Lastly, the engines and components need to be available quickly and guaranteed.”
The environment and the climate also benefit from recycling. Exactly how big these benefits are, has recently been investigated in a master’s thesis on “carbon footprint / ecological benefits of reconditioned versus newly manufactured diesel engines.” It was backed by MAN, the Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology and Automation (IPA) and the Chair of Manufacturing and Remanufacturing Technology at the University of Bayreuth. One thing is already certain: for MAN, its customers and the environment, it has proven worthwhile to make old engines and components fit for a second life.