New and Safe European Tunneling Techniques

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Wilhelm J. Kogelmann Manfred Jaeger Walter Dietrich Jochen Greinacher Klaus Ertmer
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
15
File Size:
5262 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

In Europe, novel low-cost excavator-mounted Multi Tool Miner (MTM) systems, consisting of cutter head, hammer, bucket and drill attachments permit one unit to perform multiple tasks replacing several purpose-built machines. At the Weser Tunnel in Germany, cross-passages between the twin tubes were excavated in frozen ground with a remote-controlled mini-excavator equipped with a quick-change cutter head, ripper tooth and bucket. In Switzerland at the N2 interstate near Basel, W. Dietrich AG enlarged a 2-lane tunnel to three lanes with a cutter head mounted on a special excavator. Blasting and heavy hammers were not permitted due to the closeness of the “live” twin tube. At the N20 Zurich bypass, the Joint Venture of Jaeger, Frutingerand AHB excavates highway tunnels, some with extremely large cross sections, conventionally. A cutter head mounted on an excavator removes the rock shattered by blasting precisely to the pay line, thus preserving the rock’s self-supporting capacity preventing subsidence and damages to water resources and buildings on the surface under low overburden.
Citation

APA: Wilhelm J. Kogelmann Manfred Jaeger Walter Dietrich Jochen Greinacher Klaus Ertmer  (2003)  New and Safe European Tunneling Techniques

MLA: Wilhelm J. Kogelmann Manfred Jaeger Walter Dietrich Jochen Greinacher Klaus Ertmer New and Safe European Tunneling Techniques. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2003.

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