Skip to main content

Versatile concrete pour

One of Wirtgen’s SP 15i compact concrete slipformers has been used to handle a paving job within confined conditions in Germany
August 18, 2021 Read time: 3 mins
The Wirtgen compact slipformer was able to handle the job quickly and efficiently

Despite the machine’s compact size however, it can pave profiles up to 1.3m high, while the new offset mould now allows it to pave up to 2.2m wide compared with 1.8m for the previous variant. The SP 15i is suited to duties such as the construction of kerb and gutter profiles, concrete safety barriers, drainage structures or channels as well as narrow paths.

This last function came in useful for a project in Esterwegen, near Papenburg, Germany. The machine was used by a contractor for paving a 750m-long y 2m-wide cycle path alongside a rural road. As the adjacent trees left little space to work, the machine’s manoeuvrability came in useful, as did its compact dimensions. The intelligent steering and control system with the proven Ackermann steering system allowed the machine to be handled with precision. The computer-assisted steering system varied the speed of the individual track units so that the SP 15i followed the specified references accurately.

In addition, the system can adjust the steering angle of each track unit automatically, depending on the paving radius and the machine geometry. This means that the machine can, in principle, be used to pave curved profiles with minimum radii of only 500mm. In addition, the slipform paver can be easily manoeuvred with the help of the additional crab and coordinated steering modes.

The SP 15i used in Papenburg was equipped with two steering and two height sensors each that scanned the previously tensioned stringline on the left-hand working side, ensuring the process of levelling the 12cm-thick cycle path was precise.

The machine is versatile as the auger conveyor is hydraulically adjustable longitudinally, in the angle of incline and rotatable in order to feed concrete to the mould on both the right and left side of the machine. It has conventional levelling, mechanically scanning stringlines to control the position and height during paving.

The machine was used to pave a width of 2m and with a 120mm thickness
The machine was used to pave a width of 2m and with a 120mm thickness

Cloth and manual brushing was used to deliver the required surface texture. During construction, traffic on the quiet rural road kept flowing on one lane. At the same time, the construction site was accessible for the truck mixers to discharge the concrete into the receiving hopper of the paver’s 4.6m-long auger conveyor. The 2m-wide mould was fed via the auger. As the auger conveyor is capable of holding large quantities of concrete, paving was able to continue between loads from the truck mixers.

Due to the ability to continuously pour concrete and the machine’s average advance rate of 1.3m/min, the contractor was able to complete the project in just three days.

The machine was equipped with Wirtgen’s WIDOS information system and the contractor also benefited from the supplier’s SmartService service agreement as well as the WITOS FleetView telematics solution.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New asphalt paving machines are coming to market
    April 7, 2017
    Several of the key asphalt paver manufacturers are rolling out new models that deliver increased performance and capabilities - Mike Woof writes The pace of development in the asphalt paving equipment sector is high, with a wide array of new machines coming to market. All of the major manufacturers are introducing new models for 2017, while there are also key business developments that are ongoing. One of the most notable business moves in the road machinery sector is the agreement between the Fayat G
  • Accurate milling and paving with Wirtgen
    March 15, 2022
    Equipment from the Wirtgen Group, including equipment from Vögele, Hamm and Benninghoven, have been used to resurface the Silverstone circuit
  • Machine control boosting paving quality
    April 27, 2015
    The use of machine control technology on a bypass construction job has boosted quality quality control is a topic that clients as well as contractors are finding increasingly important. Control systems are being used more and more often on construction sites as a result, so as to collect data on a range of processes. This includes looking at the asphalt being supplied to site and on the quality of paving during construction. Using this data, processes can be optimised in the medium-term and, in the long-ter
  • Surface quality a key trend in asphalt paving
    March 7, 2012
    Improved surface quality and improved machine design are key trends in the asphalt paving sector, Mike Woof reports There is a big difference in asphalt paving techniques in North America and Europe. In North America, the need to construct long stretches of highway quickly resulted in wide pavers offering high throughput capacity, with compaction equipment then being used to achieve the required density of the various courses. In Europe's highway construction projects, distances tend to be shorter and contr