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Ammann vibratory roller exciter bearing and hydraulic seal kit.

Ammann Spare Parts Guide: Sourcing & Maintenance 2026

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March 31, 2026

Introduction — Why Ammann Parts Availability Defines Fleet Uptime

Ammann spare parts sit at the intersection of precision engineering and operational necessity. When a vibratory drum bearing seizes on an AV 95-2 tandem roller mid-project, or when an asphalt plant burner assembly fails during peak paving season, every hour of downtime translates directly into schedule overruns and cost penalties. For fleet managers and procurement officers in construction, road building, and infrastructure development, maintaining a reliable supply of correctly specified Ammann replacement components is not a maintenance luxury — it is a core operational discipline.

The Ammann Group, headquartered in Langenthal, Switzerland, manufactures one of the broadest compaction equipment portfolios in the world. Their machines — ranging from lightweight vibratory plates and rammers to heavy single-drum soil compactors exceeding 25 tonnes and continuous-mix asphalt plants producing up to 500 t/h — are deployed across every continent and climate zone. This global footprint creates a complex spare parts supply challenge: OEM lead times from Europe can stretch weeks, while a job site in Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, or the Middle East cannot afford to wait.

This guide is written for maintenance engineers, equipment managers, and procurement specialists who need authoritative, technical information about Ammann spare parts — what they are, how they fail, how OEM compares to aftermarket quality, and how to source them efficiently on a global scale. Whether you operate a fleet of APR reversible plate compactors, a line of VH series soil rollers, or a full asphalt production facility built around Ammann mixing technology, the principles covered here apply directly to your service strategy.

⚠️ Pro Tip: Always cross-reference your Ammann machine serial number against the equipment’s model-specific parts catalogue before ordering. The same visual component — a hydraulic seal kit, for example — may carry different tolerances across the AV, VH, and APR model families, leading to premature failure if the wrong specification is installed.

What Are Ammann Spare Parts? Functions, Categories & OEM Specs

Ammann spare parts encompass the full spectrum of replacement and maintenance components engineered to maintain the operational integrity of Ammann compaction equipment and asphalt plant machinery. They range from high-cycle consumables — such as air filters, hydraulic seals, and vibration dampers — to long-life structural components including exciter shaft assemblies, drum drive motors, and mixer paddles. Each part is designed within strict dimensional and material tolerances that govern the performance envelopes published in Ammann’s technical documentation.

The Ammann product line spans six primary equipment families, each with its own spare parts taxonomy: light compaction equipment (rammers, vibratory plates), tandem asphalt rollers, single-drum soil compactors, pneumatic tyred rollers, asphalt pavers, and asphalt mixing plants. Across this range, spare parts are typically grouped into four service kits defined by Ammann’s own service framework — wearing kits, repair kits, maintenance kits, and emergency kits — a structure that directly informs how procurement teams should organise their inventory.

Ammann Spare Parts Master Category Reference

Ammann spare parts fall into six functional categories spanning all equipment types. The table below maps each category to its primary components and the equipment families most dependent on that parts group — a reference frame for structuring procurement priorities and warehouse inventory.

Parts CategoryKey ComponentsPrimary Equipment Family
Compactor PartsDrums, vibration units, exciter bearings, rubber buffers, scrapers, drive beltsAV / VH rollers, APR / APH plates, ATR rammers
Engine PartsAir / fuel / oil filters, pistons, injectors, turbochargers, cylinder gasketsAll self-propelled rollers & plant equipment
Hydraulic System PartsHydraulic pumps, motors, hoses, cylinders, seal kits, control valves, filtersAV / VH series, pavers, asphalt plants
Asphalt Plant ComponentsBurners, drum liners, mixer paddles, filters, baghouse elements, conveyor beltsACP / ACC / SCC mixing plants
Electrical & Cooling PartsAlternators, starters, radiators, temperature sensors, ACE control boardsAll models with electronic compaction control
Wear & Attachment PartsCutting edges, scraper blades, paver screed parts, wear plates, track padsPavers, compactors, wheeled rollers

Ammann ACE Technology Parts — What Makes Them Different

Ammann’s proprietary ACE (Ammann Compaction Expert) intelligent compaction system is fitted across both heavy and light compaction equipment. ACE continuously measures soil stiffness in real time and automatically adjusts vibration amplitude and frequency to match ground conditions. The electronic control boards, accelerometer sensors, and display modules that power ACE are classified as specialty spare parts with longer lead times and stricter specification requirements than standard mechanical components. When sourcing ACE system parts, procurement teams should insist on exact part number confirmation and compatibility verification against the specific firmware version installed on the machine.

Role in Compaction & Asphalt Plant Systems

Each Ammann spare part functions as a precision node within a larger, integrated system. In a vibratory roller such as the AV 115-2 tandem asphalt compactor, the exciter unit generates centrifugal force through counter-rotating eccentric masses housed in sealed bearing assemblies within the drum shell. The bearing quality, the eccentric mass tolerances, and the integrity of the rubber isolation mounts between drum and frame collectively determine whether the machine achieves its rated centrifugal force — typically ranging from 18 kN to over 60 kN depending on amplitude setting — and whether that force transmits cleanly into the asphalt mat without destructive resonance bouncing back into the frame.

In asphalt mixing plants of the ACP Contimix or ACC Countermix families, the spare parts ecosystem is even more interdependent. The burner assembly controls drum temperature and therefore binder viscosity; the baghouse filter elements govern particulate emissions compliance; the mixer paddles and their wear liners determine batch homogeneity and cycle time. A worn paddle that reduces mixing efficiency by even 5–8% across a production run of 300
t/h translates into significant material quality variance — variance that becomes apparent only when the asphalt mat shows early ravelling or rutting under traffic load. The spare part, in this context, is not just a maintenance item but a quality control variable.

Understanding which system each part belongs to is the first step toward intelligent inventory management. For a deeper breakdown of parts by equipment type, refer to our Ammann spare parts category guide, which maps components to specific model families across the full Ammann machine range.

Ammann Model Range — Equipment-to-Parts Dependency Map

Model SeriesEquipment TypeOperating WeightHighest-Demand Spare Parts
AV 85-2 / AV 95-2 / AV 115-2Double drum asphalt roller1.7 – 14 tExciter bearings, rubber buffers, scraper blades, hydraulic seals
VH 170 / VH 300 / VH 850 / VH 1150Single drum soil compactor7 – 25 tDrum drive motors, articulation joint pins, engine filter kits,
ACE sensors
AP 240 / VP 2400Pneumatic tyred roller6 – 24 tTyre assemblies, ballast components, hydraulic hoses, brake kits
APH 55 / APH 75 ACEHeavy reversible vibratory plateUp to 750 kgExciter oil seals, belt drive kits, air filters, vibration
isolators
APR 2220 / APR 3020Reversible plate compactorUp to 320 kgClutch assemblies, base plate wear kits, fuel filter elements
ATR 59 / ATR 66RammerUp to 90 kgRammer foot / shoe kits, spring assemblies, engine maintenance
kits
ACP Contimix / ACC CountermixAsphalt mixing plant90 – 500 t/h outputBurner elements, baghouse filters, mixer paddles, conveyor belts,
sensor kits
AFW 600-2 / AFT tracked paversAsphalt paver5.8 – 20 tScreed tamper bars, auger wear parts, hydraulic pump kits, tow
point pins

What Are the Most Common Ammann Equipment Failure Modes?

Ammann equipment failure modes cluster around five primary systems: the vibration exciter unit, the hydraulic drive circuit, the engine filtration system, the wear-contact surfaces, and the electronic compaction control (ACE). Exciter bearing fatigue is the single highest-frequency failure in Ammann rollers, typically presenting as abnormal drum vibration, audible bearing rumble, and reduced centrifugal force output — all detectable before catastrophic seizure if a structured inspection schedule is in place.

Failure ModeAffected SystemObservable SymptomsReplacement Part
Exciter bearing fatigueVibration unitAbnormal drum vibration, rumbling noise, reduced centrifugal forceExciter bearing set, seal kit
Rubber isolation buffer degradationFrame-drum interfaceExcessive frame vibration transmitted to cab/ROPS, cracked weldsAnti-vibration mount / rubber buffer kit
Hydraulic pump cavitationHydraulic drive circuitLoss of traction, overheating, foamy hydraulic oil, noise under loadHydraulic pump, suction filter, return-line filter
Engine air filter blockageEngine intakePower loss, black exhaust smoke, elevated fuel consumption, high intake vacuumPrimary & secondary air filter elements
Articulation joint pin wearSteering / frame articulationPlay in steering response, clunking under articulation load,
uneven tyre/drum wear
Articulation pin & bushing kit
Scraper blade wear-throughDrum cleaning systemAsphalt pickup on drum surface, mat tears, finish defects on
asphalt layer
Polyurethane / rubber scraper blade set
ACE sensor signal lossElectronic compaction controlACE display error codes, compaction measurement disabled, erratic amplitude controlACE accelerometer sensor, control board
Asphalt plant burner atomiser foulingDrying drum / burnerUneven flame pattern, temperature fluctuation, high fuel
consumption, emission exceedance
Burner nozzle / atomiser assembly, flame sensor
Baghouse filter element saturationDust collection systemElevated pressure drop across filter bank, increased emissions
opacity, reduced plant output
Baghouse filter cartridges / sleeves
⚠️ Pro Tip: Exciter bearing failures in Ammann rollers almost always follow a predictable pattern — oil seal degradation allows moisture and compacted fines to enter the bearing housing before the bearing itself fails. Replace exciter oil seals at every 1,000-hour service interval without exception, even if the seal shows no obvious damage. This single preventive action accounts for the majority of exciter bearing life extension in field operations.

OEM vs. Aftermarket Ammann Parts — Detailed Comparison

The OEM vs. aftermarket debate in heavy equipment spare parts is rarely binary. The critical variable is not simply “original vs. copy” but rather the depth of engineering specification adherence in the aftermarket part — dimensional accuracy, material grade, surface treatment, and quality control documentation. A correctly engineered OEM-equivalent aftermarket part for a high-volume component like an engine oil filter or a hydraulic return filter represents negligible technical risk while offering procurement flexibility. By contrast, a dimensionally undersized exciter shaft bearing sourced from an unverified supplier introduces system-level failure risk that far exceeds any cost saving. For a comprehensive framework on evaluating aftermarket part quality across heavy equipment brands, see our OEM vs. aftermarket parts evaluation guide.

OEM vs. OEM-Equivalent Aftermarket — Specification
Matrix

Evaluation CriterionAmmann OEM PartHigh-Quality OEM-EquivalentLow-Quality Aftermarket
Dimensional toleranceFactory spec, verifiedMatched to OEM drawingOften ±0.2–0.5mm off spec
Material gradeSpecified alloy / compoundEquivalent grade, testedSubstituted, unverified
Surface treatmentPhosphating / nitriding / HT as specifiedReplicated process, documentedOften omitted or incomplete
QC documentationFull traceability, CoCISO-compliant CoC availableNone or generic
Lead time (ex-Europe)2–6 weeks typical3–10 days from regional stockVariable, unpredictable
Warranty applicabilityFull OEM warrantySupplier warranty, documentedNo effective warranty
Relative cost index1.0× (baseline)0.55–0.75×0.25–0.40×
Risk profileLowestLow–medium (spec-dependent)High — system damage risk

The cost index comparison above makes a fundamental point: a credible OEM-equivalent part typically costs 55–75% of the OEM price while delivering comparable service life and functional performance. The cost differential on a low-quality part drops further to 25–40%, but the total cost of ownership — factoring in shortened service intervals, secondary damage to mating components, and unscheduled downtime — routinely exceeds OEM cost within one
or two service cycles.

A practical tiering strategy for Ammann fleet maintenance: use OEM parts for safety-critical and tolerance-sensitive components (exciter bearing assemblies, hydraulic pump cartridges, ACE sensors, articulation pins); use verified OEM-equivalent aftermarket parts for high-consumption consumables (filter elements, scraper blades, rubber buffers, gasket sets); avoid unverified aftermarket entirely for structural and load-bearing components where dimensional
accuracy directly governs fatigue life.

The European standard Ammann Genuine Spare Parts & Service Kits (official) defines the four OEM service kit tiers — wearing, repair, maintenance, and emergency — that form the recommended procurement baseline for any Ammann fleet.

Global Sourcing & Quality Assurance for Ammann Spare Parts

Sourcing Ammann spare parts outside of the European OEM network requires a disciplined supplier qualification process. Fleet managers operating in regions with limited Ammann dealer coverage — across much of Sub-Saharan Africa, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, and parts of Latin America — face a consistent challenge: parts identified in the Ammann electronic parts catalogue may carry lead times of four to six weeks from the European distribution network. For machines running critical paths on infrastructure contracts, this wait is commercially untenable.

The supplier qualification checklist for Ammann OEM-equivalent parts should address five dimensions: part number cross-referencing against the OEM catalogue, dimensional inspection reports or CMM data for tolerance-critical parts, material certification documents (mill certificates for metallic parts, compound specifications for rubber/polymer parts), ISO 9001 production quality certification of the manufacturing facility, and documented testing protocols for functional parts such as hydraulic pumps, control valves, and sensors. Suppliers who can provide documentation across all five dimensions represent a reliable OEM-equivalent source; suppliers who can address only one or two should be restricted to non-critical consumables only.

Supplier Qualification — Five-Dimension Checklist

Qualification DimensionRequired EvidenceCritical For
Part number cross-referenceVerified OEM catalogue matchAll parts
Dimensional inspection dataCMM report or drawing + tolerance confirmationBearings, seals, pins, wear plates
Material certificationMill certificate / compound spec sheetStructural parts, rubber mounts, hydraulic seals
Manufacturing ISO certificationCurrent ISO 9001 certificateAll supplier facilities
Functional testing protocolTest bench data / pressure certificationHydraulic pumps, control valves, ACE sensors

Sourcing Ammann Spare Parts Globally

3GEN Export maintains an Ammann spare parts catalogue covering compactor parts, asphalt plant components, engine kits, hydraulic system assemblies, and electrical/cooling components — each manufactured to strict international standards with full OEM-equivalent specification documentation. Parts are shipped globally with competitive lead times, directly addressing the supply gap for fleets operating outside the European dealer network.

View Ammann Spare Parts at 3GEN Export →

Maintenance Schedules & Installation Protocols for Ammann Equipment

Correct installation of Ammann spare parts is as important as part quality selection. A correctly specified exciter bearing installed with the wrong pre-load torque, contaminated lubricant, or improper seal seating will fail prematurely regardless of its material quality. Ammann publishes torque specifications, lubricant grades, and clearance tolerances in the model-specific workshop manuals; these values must be treated as hard limits, not guidelines.

Ammann Roller & Compactor Maintenance Interval
Reference

Service IntervalTasksParts Required
Every 10 hours (daily)Engine oil level, hydraulic fluid level, air filter pre-cleaner, drum scraper condition, water sprinkling system
250 hoursEngine oil & filter change, fuel filter replacement, lubrication of all grease points, drum drive belt tension checkEngine oil filter, fuel filter element, grease cartridges
500 hoursAir filter primary element replacement, hydraulic return filter, exciter oil level check, water pump inspectionAir filter element, hydraulic return filter, exciter oil
1,000 hoursHydraulic oil & tank filter replacement, exciter oil change & seal inspection, articulation pin lubrication & clearance check, scraper blade replacementHydraulic oil, tank filter, exciter seal kit, scraper blade set
2,000 hoursFull exciter bearing inspection / replacement, rubber isolation mount assessment, ACE sensor calibration, hydraulic pump pressure test, coolant system serviceExciter bearing set, rubber buffer kit, coolant, hydraulic pump seal kit
4,000 hoursEngine overhaul assessment, full hydraulic system audit, exciter shaft inspection for fatigue cracks, articulation joint pin & bushing replacementEngine rebuild kit, articulation pin-bushing set, full hydraulic seal kit

Ammann Exciter Bearing Replacement — Step-by-Step Protocol

Replacing exciter bearings on Ammann vibratory rollers (AV and VH series) requires removing the drum assembly, accessing the exciter unit housing, extracting worn bearings under controlled temperature, and reinstalling with correct pre-load and fresh oil seals. Always consult the model-specific workshop manual for torque specifications before beginning.

  • Isolate and secure the machine. Park on a level surface, engage the parking brake, turn off the engine, and wait for all hydraulic pressure to dissipate. Lockout/Tagout (LOTO) the main battery disconnect before removing any drum assembly covers.
  • Drain exciter oil. Remove the exciter housing drain plug and drain the full oil charge into a clean container. Note any metallic particles or discoloration in the drained oil — heavy metallic contamination confirms bearing failure and may indicate shaft scoring requiring further inspection.
  • Remove the drum assembly. Following the model-specific workshop procedure, detach the drum drive coupling, disconnect the hydraulic motor, and support the drum with an appropriate lifting fixture before removing the drum-to-frame mounting fasteners. Never allow the drum to hang unsupported from hydraulic hoses.
  • Access and disassemble the exciter housing. Remove the exciter end cover fasteners (note torque specification for reassembly), extract the eccentric shaft assembly using a bearing puller, and lay out all components on a clean workbench. Do not intermix components from left and right exciter units on tandem-drum machines.
  • Extract worn bearings. Use an induction heater or hydraulic bearing puller to remove the worn bearings from the shaft. Never use a direct-impact method — hammer blows transmit load through the rolling element path and damage the shaft journals. Inspect shaft journals for scoring; light scoring (below 0.05 mm) can be polished; deep scoring requires shaft replacement.
  • Install new bearings and oil seals. Heat the new bearing to 80–100°C using an induction heater and slide onto the shaft, seating firmly against the shoulder. Allow to cool before installing new oil seals — always use the seal installation tool to avoid lip distortion. Replace both inner and outer seals regardless of their visual condition when a bearing replacement is performed.
  • Reassemble the exciter unit and fill with oil. Reinstall the eccentric shaft assembly and exciter end cover, torquing fasteners to the workshop manual specification. Fill the exciter housing with the specified oil grade and quantity — typically an ISO VG 220 gear oil to the fill hole level. Over- or under-filling is a leading cause of premature bearing re-failure.
  • Reinstall the drum and run commissioning check. Reattach the drum assembly, reconnect the drive coupling and hydraulic motor, and torque all fasteners to specification. Start the machine and run at idle for 10 minutes before engaging vibration. Check for oil leaks, abnormal noise, and correct ACE sensor readout before returning the machine to operational duty.
⚠️ Pro Tip: Always replace both bearings in an exciter shaft assembly simultaneously, even if only one bearing shows measurable wear. The second bearing has been operating under the same load cycle history and will fail within a fraction of the time required for a new bearing — scheduling a second replacement job shortly after the first is a false economy that Ammann service engineers universally advise against.

OEM-Equivalent Parts, Ready to Ship Globally

3GEN Export supplies OEM-equivalent Ammann spare parts — including exciter bearing kits, hydraulic seal assemblies, engine filter sets, and asphalt plant wear components — with fast international dispatch to construction and infrastructure projects worldwide. Every part ships with a Certificate of Conformance and full dimensional verification documentation.

Request Ammann Parts at 3GEN Export →

Keeping Your Ammann Fleet Mission-Ready

Ammann spare parts management is ultimately a function of system-level thinking. Each component — from a drum scraper blade to an ACE control board — exists within an interdependent mechanical and electronic architecture that determines whether a machine achieves its rated compaction performance, fuel efficiency, and operational lifespan. The procurement decisions made at the parts sourcing stage ripple directly into maintenance cost curves, machine
availability rates, and ultimately the commercial performance of every project the equipment supports.

The most effective Ammann fleet maintenance programs share three structural characteristics: a tiered parts sourcing strategy that matches part quality standards to component criticality, a proactive service interval discipline built on Ammann’s published maintenance schedules rather than reactive failure response, and a qualified global supply partner who can deliver correctly specified Ammann spare parts with short lead times regardless of project location.
For fleets operating intensive compaction or asphalt production cycles, these three elements together are what separate predictable, cost-controlled maintenance from costly, schedule-disrupting breakdowns.

Whether your operation runs a single APH 75 plate compactor on a utility repair crew or a multi-machine fleet of VH series soil rollers and ACP mixing plants on a major road construction programme, the fundamental principle remains identical: the right Ammann spare parts, sourced from a verifiable supplier, installed by a competent technician following the workshop manual procedure, represent the most cost-effective maintenance investment available to any
fleet manager.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How do I identify the correct Ammann spare part number for my machine?

A: Locate the machine serial number plate, typically on the front frame or ROPS structure, and cross-reference it in the Ammann electronic parts catalogue (EPC) for your model series. The EPC uses serial number ranges to identify model-year specific parts, which is critical because the same part name may carry different part numbers across production years. If your serial number is not in the EPC, contact your Ammann dealer or a specialist spare parts supplier with the serial number, model, and a high-resolution photo of the component for cross-reference identification.

Q: What is the difference between Ammann wearing kits, repair kits, maintenance kits, and emergency kits?

A: Ammann’s four service kit categories serve distinct purposes. Wearing kits cover high-cycle consumable components — scrapers, filters, belts — replaced at regular intervals. Repair kits bundle parts needed to restore a specific failed subsystem such as a hydraulic cylinder or exciter unit. Maintenance kits package all parts required for a scheduled service interval (250, 500, or 1,000 hours). Emergency kits contain the highest-priority fast-failure parts — filters, seals, and belts — recommended as on-site stock to minimise unplanned downtime between scheduled deliveries.

Q: Can aftermarket Ammann spare parts void the machine warranty?

A: In most jurisdictions, using aftermarket parts does not automatically void an equipment warranty — the OEM must demonstrate that the aftermarket part directly caused the failure in question. However, using non-OEM parts for warranty-active machines carries a documentation burden. Retain all installation records, part certificates, and service reports. For machines still under factory warranty, the safest approach is to use OEM or certified OEM-equivalent parts that carry a supplier warranty and full specification documentation. Consult your regional Ammann dealer for specific warranty terms applicable to your equipment.

Q: What exciter oil specification do Ammann vibratory rollers require?

A: Ammann vibratory rollers typically specify an ISO VG 220 gear oil for exciter housing lubrication under standard operating temperature conditions. However, the exact specification — including viscosity grade and additive package (EP vs. non-EP) — varies by model and climate zone. High-temperature environments or continuous heavy-load operation may require a higher viscosity grade. Always confirm the exact oil specification in the model-specific operation and maintenance manual before filling; incorrect oil specification is a common and avoidable cause of accelerated exciter bearing failure.

Q: How can global construction projects source Ammann spare parts with short delivery lead times?

A: Projects outside Europe face OEM lead times of four to six weeks from Ammann’s Swiss/European supply chain. Three strategies reduce this exposure: maintaining an emergency parts stock of high-failure-risk consumables on-site based on the manufacturer’s emergency kit recommendations; engaging a qualified OEM-equivalent aftermarket supplier with regional distribution capability who can dispatch within days; and building a 90-day rolling forecast of consumable parts requirements to enable advance ordering. Specialist exporters with established Ammann parts catalogues and international logistics infrastructure can typically match or exceed OEM quality specification while delivering significantly shorter lead times to remote project locations.


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