Bureau Of Reclamation Experience In Use Of Boring Machines In Tunnel Excavation ? Introduction

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 41
- File Size:
- 2173 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1970
Abstract
This paper summarizes the Bureau of Reclamation's experience in the use of boring machines to excavate six major tunnels on the Bureau's water resources development projects in the western United States. The summary of experience is presented as a compilation of brief case studies for each of the six tunnels. Each compilation presents data on the tunnel dimensions, geological characteristics of the excavated rock, the tunneling machine used, machine operation, muck handling, method of tunnel support, ventilation system, and related information. The listing of the six tunnels in Table 1 reflects a diversity of tunnel lengths and diameters. However, despite this diversity of dimensions as well as the variety of rock encountered during excavation, the six tunnels have one major characteristic in common: their excavation was significantly expedited by the use of boring machines. Beginning with the 10,079-foot-long Tunnel No. 1 on the Navajo Indian Irrigation Project in New Mexico - the Bureau's first tunnel to be excavated by a boring machine - the boring machines, or "moles," have demonstrated their effectiveness in rapid and economical tunnel excavation. Tunnel No. 1, virtually 2 miles long, was bored through in 9 months, an unprecedented achievement in Bureau engineering experience, as compared with tunnels previously excavated by conventional means. Boring of the 45,630-foot-long Blanco Tunnel and the 26,610-foot-long Oso Tunnel, both on the San Juan-Chama Project in Colorado, set world records in rates of excavation,l/* Two days of exceptional progress highlighted the
Citation
APA:
(1970) Bureau Of Reclamation Experience In Use Of Boring Machines In Tunnel Excavation ? IntroductionMLA: Bureau Of Reclamation Experience In Use Of Boring Machines In Tunnel Excavation ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1970.