Skip to main content

HEXAGON LIVE - making the digital world become a reality

HEXAGON LIVE - the digital world becomes reality. Everyone in the construction and infrastructure maintenance sector faces the same great challenge - create reality with design through efficiency. But, as designs become more complex, how to gain efficiency is the real trick. These challenges are overcome only by people dedicated to solving problems. That puts them among the world’s innovators, said Ola Rollen, chief executive of technology information company Hexagon, during his welcoming keynote address to
June 3, 2015 Read time: 4 mins

Everyone in the construction and infrastructure maintenance sector faces the same great challenge - create reality with design through efficiency. But, as designs become more complex, how to gain efficiency is the real trick.

These challenges are overcome only by people dedicated to solving problems. That puts them among the world’s innovators, said Ola Rollen, chief executive of technology information company 7121 Hexagon, during his welcoming keynote address to the Hexagon Live conference in Las Vegas.

It remains true, also, that necessity is the mother of invention. People will find a way of achieving a goal that at first appears unachievable. Having a great deal of knowledge about a subject is not enough to innovate. An equally essential ingredient is having an imagination to see further, to see the big picture, he said.

The first day of the event, held again at the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino, was attended by around 3,500 delegate from around the world, intent on hearing how innovation, such as 3D machine control, can improve their businesses.

Innovation does not sit alone, but comes from a long history of thought and experience, as well as dreamers. Rollen held up the struggle by the two American Wright brothers who developed the first practical heavier than air aeroplane in 1903.

Their knowledge was based on the sketches of proposed flying machines by the 15th century Italian polymath Leonardo da Vinci. It also borrowed heavily on the findings of the German glider pioneer, Otto Lillienthal.

It is this combination of imagination and knowledge that leads to innovation. A big boost to innovation has been the move towards collaborative workplace processes where people with seemingly very different expertise work with people in other areas to come up with solutions. Innovation is born of this, he said.

That has led to trends such as the smart connected factory shopfloor where information is shared and not kept in silos. From this the ‘shopfloor’ has become the construction site where knowledge is shared on increasingly complex projects.

An increasingly important trend is crowdsource mapping and also the move toward things being autonomous, for example removing the driver from a vehicle. Innovation will be the key to this, he said.

The Hexagon Geospatial track of the conference gave delegates an insight into just how efficient machine control can be. Long gone are the days of surveyors putting out wooden stakes around the construction site to guide machine drivers, said Edvin Dale, director of geomatics at the Norwegian company K.A. Aurstad, in his presentation. Since adopting machine control, there has been a direct correlation between the number of machine controlled excavators – the company has 45 - and company profits. Both have risen in tandem, said Dale, who is also in Leica Geosystems users’ group.

Dale calculated that graders using 3D for prework on a road paving job were around 85% efficient versus 60% for 2D, where efficiency levels were calculated on the basis of human intervention in the graders. There were fewer human interventions for 3D, he said.

Accuracy and quality are essential for contractor and client alike, and 3D meant the grader had to rework fewer parts of a surface than a grader using 2D. Dale said there was a second grader pass on a surface only 15% or the time versus 50% of the time using 2D. A third pass was needed only 1% of the time for 3D versus 25% for 2D.

But innovation is not always accepted easily. As Rollen commented during his keynote presentation, the Wright brothers had to take their flying machine and ideas to France where investors were more prepared to take a chance. A key innovation was that the Wright brothers developed a three axis control system that made fixed-wing powered flight possible.

Similarly, an innovation for excavator buckets is spreading more slowly than perhaps expected. Delegates heard how tilting buckets for excavators are now widely used in Scandinavia – market penetration of 95% - but are still a novelty outside the region.

Per Vappling, vice president of marketing for Rototilt, said the company, which has been making rotating buckets since 1989, teamed up with Hexagon last year to experiment with 3D machine control on the tilting units attached to 60 excavators.

Improvements in accuracy have meant time savings of between 20-40%, he said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Rapid adoption of GPS machine control
    April 5, 2012
    The high sophistication of GPS machine control systems has resulted in a fast pace of technological advancement. The three major players in the machine control sector, Leica Geosystems, Topcon and Trimble have all made major gains in recent years. The sophistication of the latest systems can combine satellite position data from the GPS and GLONASS networks with information from total stations to provide precise, high speed machine operation. Further more the firms have also prepared themselves for the intro
  • Show me the money at Australian Summit
    September 4, 2012
    The question of how to finance and fund major road infrastructure projects in Australia – including the potential role of user-pays charging as a funding solution – was top of mind at the recent Roads Australia National Summit in Sydney. The two-day summit, organised by peak national body Roads Australia, is the largest and most influential annual gathering of industry decision-makers in the country. This year’s summit was held against a backdrop of concern over the future of a raft of major road projects t
  • Construction adapting with Machine control Technologies
    June 18, 2015
    Machine control technologies are revolutionising construction – Dan Gilkes writes Electronic control of engines, transmissions and hydraulic systems, primarily to reduce exhaust emissions and boost productivity, is also providing manufacturers with an opportunity to incorporate increasingly complex machine control into their equipment. This in turn has the potential to make the machinery more productive, further cutting fuel consumption as part of a virtuous operational circle.
  • Machine control for Mexican graders
    November 29, 2012
    A major Mexican highway project has benefited from the use of the latest machine control technology from Trimble Contractor Construcarr estimates that its work on the Guadalajara – Colima highway project was finished 23% faster due to the use of machine control systems than it would have been using conventional technology. The company used a Trimble GCS900 grade control package instead of staking and grading methods. The company is a leader in road construction techniques in Mexico and has invested heavi