Zimmerman 9000 Series Volumetric Mixer Financing

Volumetric Mixer Financing

Zimmerman 9000 Series Volumetric Mixer Financing

Finance a Zimmerman 9000 Series volumetric mixer. High-production platform for large rural and commercial concrete operations. Fund in 1-2 weeks.

The Zimmerman 9000 Series steps up from the Zim Mixer into genuine high-production territory. Where the standard Zim Mixer covers most rural and small-commercial work, the 9000 Series is sized and configured for operators running large-volume daily schedules: multi-yard foundation pours, highway shoulder work, large agricultural facility projects, and anywhere that a smaller unit would require multiple loads to complete what the 9000 does in one. The margin per pour on that extra capacity is the reason operators move up to the 9000.

Financing the 9000 Series involves a higher purchase price than the entry-level Zimmerman models, but the lender community that handles volumetric concrete equipment treats the 9000 Series as a solid collateral class. We bring these deals to lenders who understand Zimmerman's production-class machines and assign appropriate residual value. The financing terms that come back reflect a real asset, not a specialty machine that lenders struggle to categorize. Operators can review the full Zimmerman brand context at our Zimmerman Industries financing page.

We fund 9000 Series deals on an application-only basis for transactions that fall within our standard threshold. Three months of bank statements and a completed application are the primary documents. Operators with deals that require additional review get the same fast process, just with a few more supporting documents to match the larger transaction size. Equipment loan structures are the most common path for 9000 Series buyers who want to own the machine from day one and build equity through the payment term.

9000 Series Production Capabilities

Zimmerman designed the 9000 Series for operators who need sustained high-volume output over a full work day. The aggregate bin volume is larger than the Zim Mixer, reducing refill frequency on extended pours. The proportioning system is engineered for higher aggregate feed rates, which translates into more yards per hour when the job demands it. For operators whose daily concrete schedule fills every available working hour, the 9000 Series' capacity ceiling matters.

The 9000 Series handles mix design complexity well. Operators who deliver multiple mix designs in a single day, perhaps a standard mix for a slab in the morning and a fiber-reinforced mix for a commercial surface in the afternoon, can make those transitions cleanly without extensive recalibration. That flexibility is increasingly important as ready-mix concrete suppliers who operate volumetric equipment move into specialty work to differentiate from competitors.

From a resale standpoint, the 9000 Series holds its value because it occupies a distinct production tier. Operators who grow out of smaller volumetric units and need more output find the 9000 Series in the resale market and are willing to pay for it. That active buyer base keeps residual values solid, which is part of why financing terms on the 9000 Series are competitive.

Comparing the 9000 Series to other high-output volumetric options, including the large volumetric mixer class from other manufacturers, the Zimmerman's rural-market track record and parts availability give it advantages in applications far from dealer service centers. Operators who run their machine on remote jobsites without quick access to service support value that parts supply reliability.

Using Your 9000 Series Equity

Operators who have owned a 9000 Series for a few years often find they've built meaningful equity in the machine. A cash-out refinance extracts that equity as working capital: we refinance the machine, pay off any existing balance, and the difference comes to the operator as cash. The 9000 Series stays in production generating concrete revenue while the cash proceeds fund a deposit on a second unit, a truck chassis upgrade, or operating capital for a seasonal workload spike.

A Sale-Leaseback is another option for 9000 Series owners who want to mobilize the machine's full value. The operator sells the unit to a financing partner, collects the full appraised value in cash, and leases the same machine back on a structured monthly payment. Nothing changes on the job site. The cash is available immediately. The lease payments are typically tax-deductible as a business operating expense. It's a clean capital-extraction tool that works well when the machine is worth substantially more than the operator needs to borrow on a traditional refinance.

We've structured both options for 9000 Series owners and the process is the same as any other Zimmerman transaction: application, supporting documents, and a fast close. The machine's value drives the available proceeds, and a current appraisal helps ensure everyone is working from accurate numbers.

Finance Your Zimmerman 9000 Series

The 9000 Series is Zimmerman's production platform for operators who take mobile concrete output seriously. We fund these deals fast with a financing team that knows the machine. Apply today and we'll have a decision in 24-48 hours. Funding follows in about two weeks.

Common questions

Answers before you send the file

How does the 9000 Series compare to the Zim Mixer in terms of financing ease?

Both are financeable assets with our financing team. The 9000 Series carries a higher purchase price, which means the loan amount is larger. Larger loans sometimes require slightly more documentation or a stronger financial profile to approve. The process and timeline are similar; the underwriting just applies more scrutiny to a bigger number.

Can I finance a 9000 Series with less than two years in business?

Yes, though it's harder. A meaningful down payment, strong personal credit, and bank statements showing real concrete revenue help offset shorter business history. If you're transitioning from an existing concrete operation where you were an employee and just started your own business, that prior industry experience carries weight with lenders.

What documentation do I need for a 9000 Series deal above the application-only threshold?

If the deal exceeds roughly $400k, lenders typically want to see two years of business tax returns in addition to bank statements. Some may also want a business plan or purchase contract. The exact requirement depends on the lender and the total transaction size. We'll tell you exactly what's needed for your specific deal.

If I upgrade from a Zim Mixer to a 9000 Series, can I trade in my existing machine?

If a dealer accepts your Zim Mixer as a trade, we can finance the net purchase price of the 9000 Series after the trade-in credit. This reduces the loan amount and often the monthly payment. Alternatively, you could keep the Zim Mixer as a second production unit and finance the 9000 separately.

Does financing the 9000 Series prevent me from financing other equipment later in the same year?

Not automatically. Existing loans show up as liabilities in your financial profile, but if your revenue supports multiple payments, lenders will approve additional equipment. The key is demonstrating that your concrete business generates enough income to service all obligations comfortably.

Put this mixer on the production schedule.

Send the machine, seller, price, and delivery date. We will identify the next financing step.