COVER STORY
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MAKE IT
At Rayner Equipment Systems,
being cutting-edge is a tradition
B
efore Ken Talley and his team
from Talley Oil visited Gordon
Rayner of Rayner Equipment
Systems a few years ago, they were
convinced they’d need to design a whole
new sealer.
Talley said the company, now in its
15th year of business since spinning off
of Talley Transportation, was looking
for a heavier-duty piece of equipment
than what was standard; the sprayers the
company had been using had a tough
time standing up to thicker clay-based
asphalt emulsion and modifiers, and the
downtime needed for repairs and main-
www.callape.com
RAYN
tenance were too costly. In other words,
Talley and his team were ready to work
with Rayner on revolutionizing the seal-
coating industry.
Turns out, Rayner already had.
“We first heard about the RaynMaker
when we visited Gordon Rayner at Ray-
ner Equipment Systems about manufac-
turing our own sealer product,” said Tal-
ley. The RaynMaker was Rayner’s latest
offering, and it solved many of the prob-
lems Talley had in mind by improving
on standard sealcoat equipment. With
twin, 3-inch modified positive displace-
ment pumps, the RaynMaker can spray
[6]
a heavy-clay-modified asphalt emulsion,
even when it’s further engineered with
modifiers such as polymers, ground tire
rubber and fine crushed aggregates –all
without causing wear and profit-pinch-
ing downtime.
The design improvements didn’t stop
there. The RaynMaker IIIG has wireless
remote controls which allow it to be op-
erated from up to 1,500 feet away. Some
of its many unique features include a full
sweep mixer; a 1,600 square-inch, fil-
tered spray bar to help prevent tip clogs; a
separate large primary filter; a retractable
spray bar for ease of transport; and twin
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