EXCAVATION AND EARTH MOVING EQUIPMENT AND MACHINES
What Are The Different Excavation and Machine Moving Equipment?
Bulldozers (‘dozers’) are used for cutting and grading work, for pushing scrapers to assist in their loading, stripping borrowpits, and for spreading and compacting fill. The larger sizes are powerful but are costly to run and maintain, so it is not economic for the contractor to keep one on site for the occasional job.
Its principal full-time use is for cutting, or for spreading fill for earthworks in the specified layer thickness and compacting and bonding it to the previously compacted layer. It is the weight and vibration of the dozer that achieves compaction, so that a Caterpillar ‘D8’ 115 h.p. weighing about 15 t, or its equivalent, is the machine required; not a ‘D6’ weighing 7.5 t which is not half as effective in compaction. The dozer cannot shift material very far, it can only spread it locally.
A dozer with gripped tracks can climb a 1 in 2 slope, and may also climb a slope as steep as 1 in 1.5 provided the material of the slope gives adequate grip and is not composed of loose rounded cobbles. On such slopes of 1 in 1.5 or 1 in 2 the dozer must not turn, but must go straight up or down the slope, turning on flatter ground at the top and bottom. It is dangerous to work a dozer (and any kind of tractor) on sidelong ground, particularly if the ground is soft.
Dozers cannot traverse metalled roads because of the damage this would cause, and they should not be permitted on finished formation surfaces. Sometimes a flat tracked dozer (i.e. with no grips to the tracks) can be used on a formation if the ground is suitable.
Motorized scrapers are the principal bulk excavation and earth-placing machines, used extensively on road construction or earth dam construction. Their movement needs to be planned so that they pick up material on a downgrade, their weight assisting in loading; if this cannot be managed or the ground is tough, they may need a dozer acting as a pusher when loading.
This not only avoids the need for a more expensive higher powered scraper, but reduces the wear on its large balloon tyres which are expensive. The motorized scraper gives the lowest cost of excavation per cubic metre of any machine, but it needs a wide area to excavate or fill and only gentle gradients on its haul road. It cannot excavate hard bands or rock, or cut near-vertical sided excavations.
The face shovel, or ‘digger’ can give high outputs in most types of materials, including broken rock. It comes in all sizes from small to ‘giant’; but for typical major excavation jobs (such as quarrying for fill) it would have a relatively large bucket of 2–5m3 capacity. The size adopted depends on what rate of excavation must be achieved, the capacity of dump trucks it feeds to cart away material, and the haul distance to tip or earthworks to be constructed.
What Are The Different Excavation and Machine Moving Equipment?
Bulldozers (‘dozers’) are used for cutting and grading work, for pushing scrapers to assist in their loading, stripping borrowpits, and for spreading and compacting fill. The larger sizes are powerful but are costly to run and maintain, so it is not economic for the contractor to keep one on site for the occasional job.
Its principal full-time use is for cutting, or for spreading fill for earthworks in the specified layer thickness and compacting and bonding it to the previously compacted layer. It is the weight and vibration of the dozer that achieves compaction, so that a Caterpillar ‘D8’ 115 h.p. weighing about 15 t, or its equivalent, is the machine required; not a ‘D6’ weighing 7.5 t which is not half as effective in compaction. The dozer cannot shift material very far, it can only spread it locally.
A dozer with gripped tracks can climb a 1 in 2 slope, and may also climb a slope as steep as 1 in 1.5 provided the material of the slope gives adequate grip and is not composed of loose rounded cobbles. On such slopes of 1 in 1.5 or 1 in 2 the dozer must not turn, but must go straight up or down the slope, turning on flatter ground at the top and bottom. It is dangerous to work a dozer (and any kind of tractor) on sidelong ground, particularly if the ground is soft.
Dozers cannot traverse metalled roads because of the damage this would cause, and they should not be permitted on finished formation surfaces. Sometimes a flat tracked dozer (i.e. with no grips to the tracks) can be used on a formation if the ground is suitable.
Motorized scrapers are the principal bulk excavation and earth-placing machines, used extensively on road construction or earth dam construction. Their movement needs to be planned so that they pick up material on a downgrade, their weight assisting in loading; if this cannot be managed or the ground is tough, they may need a dozer acting as a pusher when loading.
This not only avoids the need for a more expensive higher powered scraper, but reduces the wear on its large balloon tyres which are expensive. The motorized scraper gives the lowest cost of excavation per cubic metre of any machine, but it needs a wide area to excavate or fill and only gentle gradients on its haul road. It cannot excavate hard bands or rock, or cut near-vertical sided excavations.
The face shovel, or ‘digger’ can give high outputs in most types of materials, including broken rock. It comes in all sizes from small to ‘giant’; but for typical major excavation jobs (such as quarrying for fill) it would have a relatively large bucket of 2–5m3 capacity. The size adopted depends on what rate of excavation must be achieved, the capacity of dump trucks it feeds to cart away material, and the haul distance to tip or earthworks to be constructed.
