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Monday, March 23, 2026
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Cream of the crop: NPC to showcase top pile cropping solutions at ScotPlant 2026

Pile cropper

NATIONAL Pile Croppers (NPC) has confirmed plans to showcase the company’s top pile cropping solutions at ScotPlant 2026.

The firm revealed its pile croppers are being increasingly used on major infrastructure and housing projects across Scotland.

“The decision to attend ScotPlant was based on the increasingly warm reception our pile cropping solutions have received in Scotland and the UK,” explained sales director Scott Fitchett. “Given that ScotPlant is such a well targeted show, with its visitor base being high quality ‘trade’, we have decided to exhibit a cross section of our offering.

“Hydraulic pile croppers are becoming the ‘must-have’ equipment on sites and projects throughout the world and that includes Scotland. The equipment we aim to exhibit is bound to generate a great deal of attention and we look forward to discussing how we can help companies throughout Scotland.”

One of the reasons NPC has chosen ScotPlant to exhibit is to help familiarise Scottish construction businesses with the pile cropping technology in general, and the company’s offering in particular. A pile cropper – also known as a pile cutter or pile breaker – is described as a very precise hydraulic shear with defined angles of deflection and points of contact, ensuring a clean cut of the excess that does not interfere with the efficacy of the remaining pile. There are a breadth of different types and sizes of available, depending on the task at hand. For example, augured, bearing, contiguous, secant, CFA, trench and helical displacement with croppers are available from NPC in sizes ranging normally from 300mm to 1,200mm in diameter.

Mounted on a 360O excavator via quick release fittings, pile croppers have proved their versatility and effectiveness in various sectors, from housing and commercial to public, private, utilities, road and rail. When lowered onto the concrete pile, the hydraulic system operates the jaw(s) which allows the pile cropper to cut a de-bonded pile and cause the concrete to break away, leaving a horizontal finish as a result. In doing this the chisels penetrate in a precise direction up to the rebar to make the fracture. On bonded piles, the chisels will penetrate further, and due to the shape of the chisels and the reaction forces of the rebar, the concrete will break in pieces and can easily be lifted off the pile enabling recycling of the cut away concrete.

In recent years, precast concrete piles have been used for various civil engineering and construction structures, with common applications ranging from small housing developments to major inner city renovation, construction and infrastructure projects, such as HS2.  These mass produced piles are customisable length wise and are suitable for a range of applications and ground conditions.