|
Moving
1.5 Million Cubic Yards During Oklahoma Turnpike Construction
In mass excavation,
the formula for success is quite simple: You need productive and durable
equipment to move as much earth as you can in as little time as possible.
And when a project calls for the removal of almost 1.5 million cubic
yards of dirt, the equipment you are using had better be up to the task.
At least that's what Jerry Carter of Carter Excavating in Sand Spring,
OK, was thinking when he went looking for an excavator for a $6.5-million
Oklahoma Transportation Authority (OTA) project.
Jerry and
his father, O.N. Carter, founded Carter Excavating and have been in
the mass excavation business for more than 20 years. The elder Carter
has seen the company grow from a small trucking business in the early
1950s to the size it is today. Employing more than 100 people and operating
a fleet in excess of 100 pieces of earthmoving equipment, Carter Excavating's
main area of expertise is site preparation and commercial development
projects throughout Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Missouri. However, being
a prime contractor and a subcontractor in Oklahoma is how much of Carter
Excavating's state-funded roadwork and commercial development projects
have been completed.
Oklahoma
Turnpike Project
Sandstone Presents a Challenge
A New Solution
Heavy-Lifting Mode Increases Lifting Capacity
|
Oklahoma
Turnpike Project
Carter
Excavating earned the bid for the 2.375-mi. Oklahoma turnpike
construction in May 1999, signing up for the task of removing
1.4 million cubic yards of dirt in a 310-day span. Among the challenges
of the project included the removal of over 500,000 cubic yards
of material for the eventual construction of a bridge across nearby
Polecat Creek. Carter determined that in order to complete the
mass excavation, a 60-ton excavator would be needed to load 35-
and 40-ton dump trucks with approximately 5,000 cubic yards of
dirt per day. "We had to top-load these trucks, and to get the
kind of production the job required, we needed a machine that
had the power to dig sandstone and the speed to meet our daily
quota," he explains.

|
|
Sandstone
Presents a Challenge
The
hardness of the sandstone in that area presented a particular
challenge for Carter and his crew. "We had to find an excavator
that could dig the softer sandstone, but we realized that nothing
could dig some of the hardest areas," he recalls. "For that, we
had to bring in a crawler tractor with a ripper on it to rip and
push the dirt so it could be loaded out with the excavator."
Ultimately,
equipment planning was the key for success on the project. "When
we were bidding on the OTA job, our project estimator Tim Quattrocchi
and I sat down and talked about the project, the production needed,
the different types of machines available, and what each could
offer," Carter says. "After working with our Komatsu
dealer, Kirby-Smith
Machinery Inc. [Oklahoma City, OK], we finally decided that
the PC600LC-6 would be the most versatile machine for us as far
as moving around the site and still providing the necessary production."

|
|
A
New Solution
Komatsu's
newest entrant into its line of hydraulic excavators, weighing
in at 131,390 lb., is designed for heavy construction, deep trenching,
and sewer, water, and pipe-laying applications. Equipped with
the most powerful engine in its class, the 384-hp PC600LC-6 provides
features to boost productivity and operator comfort under difficult
operating conditions---not unlike the conditions Carter Excavating
would experience on this project.
"It's
a large machine," Carter says. "We already owned two Komatsu PC400-6s,
but the PC600LC-6 is a bigger, heavier machine capable of handling
a larger bucket for mass-production applications. Basically, it
operates like our 95,000-pound PC400-6s. It's just bigger and
able to do more work."
Once
brought on the job, the new machine, outfitted with a 6-cubic yard bucket,
worked in tandem with Carter's two crawler dozers on-site, making
30-ft. cuts. "The PC600LC-6 stays in one area when we are making
the cuts," he describes. "After we remove about 10 feet, the dozers
come in and rip the sandstone, and the excavator cleans it up."
According
to Carter, the new machine has proved productive. "We have one
operator who uses it most often, and I have operated it as well.
We've been very pleased with it. It's a nice machine that has
good visibility, is easy to operate, and offers big productivity."

|
|
Heavy-Lifting
Mode Increases Lifting Capacity
Specifically,
one feature on the PC600LC-6 has helped with the challenges presented
by the tough sandstone. The PC600LC-6 is equipped with a special
DH mode, which helps boost productivity by providing added power
and quicker engine response to sudden load changes. In addition
to a general operating mode for light-load work, there is an "H"
operating mode for normal digging and loading operations. The
heavy-lift mode---easily activated via a switch---can increase
lifting capacity by 10%, making it especially advantageous in
heavy-construction applications.
"The
heavy-lift mode helps provide an extra burst of power when digging
up some of the hard rock," Carter points out. "Of course, when
the excavator gets into some of the really dense material, that's
when the dozers have to come in." The 6-yd. bucket has also played
an important role in productivity. Normally equipped with a 3.75-yd.
bucket, the larger bucket increased production significantly.
"With a 4-yard bucket, the PC600LC-6 might load around 2,500 cubic
yards a day with no problem," he says. "But we needed double that
production, and with the bigger bucket, it was easy."
One
aspect of the job that could not have been anticipated was Polecat
Creek continuously washing out as a result of frequent rains.
"During the first two months on the job, the creek washed out
five times," Carter recalls. "We have the excavator on a bluff
on the east side of the creek. When the creek washes out, the
excavator loads the trucks and we rebuild it. It has handled the
task just fine."
Project
complexities aside, Carter believes the Oklahoma turnpike project
boils down to one fundamental challenge. "It sounds simple, but
basically this project is a large road job that has a great deal
of material to be moved. It has some tricky slopes, hard sandstone
rock, and a creek to contend with-all with constant production
deadlines that must be met. But we are meeting these deadlines,
and the new excavator has helped us to do it."

|
GX
Erosion
Control Magazine | Grading and Excavation Contractor
Magazine
MSW Management Magazine | Stormwater
Magazine
Forester Communications | E-mail
Us
|
|