Skip to main content

Simex’s versatile tool helps in tunnel excavation duties

Italian firm Simex has developed a versatile tool for use in tunnel excavation applications. This proven piece of equipment has been used to help construct a key tunnel link in Italy, close to the border with Switzerland. Work on the Varzo Tunnel has been carried out by Italian contractor Ceprini Costruzioni (CC).
March 13, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Italian firm 1141 SIMEX has developed a versatile tool for use in tunnel excavation applications. This proven piece of equipment has been used to help construct a key tunnel link in Italy, close to the border with Switzerland. Work on the Varzo Tunnel has been carried out by Italian contractor Ceprini Costruzioni (CC).

The final phase of this three-phase project required the installation of two-hinged steel ribs every 1.75m, anchored to ties with a C-shaped fastening element (totalling 44 elements). Another task was the laying of a 10x10cm, 6mm diameter wire mesh covering up to 18cm of fibre-reinforced shotcrete. One of the major challenges of the third phase was to cut around 20cm deep and 40cm wide into the crown of the tunnel in order to create the inserts for the steel ribs.  A solution to the problem was offered by Simex, which designed a special rotary cutter derived from the model TF 800.

Attached to a 2300 Komatsu PC138 US short-radius excavator, and featuring a modified boom and special bracket (both supplied by Grifo workshops in Perugia), the rotary cutter made it possible to make the inserts for the steel ribs.  The use of a hydraulic breaker for the application was immediately discarded by CC due to the length of time associated with its use and the lack of optimum precision, with the possible introduction of dangerous vibrations into the crown near the deteriorated area. CC decided to use a pair of Komatsu PC 138 US excavators and two Simex TF 800/V rotary cutters. The cutters were equipped with drums measuring a width of 400mm and diameter of 1100mm, and fitted with 144 Betek VC 33 bits with a 22mm bit holder.  Both cutters were said to have proven productive and reliable and were operated without interruption for 164 hours each.

Stand: B3.222

www.simex.it

View more videos
View more stories

For more information on companies in this article

Komatsu

Related Content

  • Developments in bridge monitoring technology
    July 9, 2012
    Advances in bridge monitoring technology should help ensure structural safety Highly productive, Fugro Aperio's ground penetrating radar system offers accurate scanning of bridge condition Bridge engineers can now benefit from a new technology designed to pinpoint shallow targets, such as masonry fixings, reinforcement bars or delamination between thin layers. This uses the latest high resolution ground penetrating radar (GPR) antenna and has been developed by Cambridge-based Fugro Aperio in the UK. Operati
  • BOMAG’s latest stabilisers: RS 250 and RS 300
    May 19, 2022
    Tractor-towed stabilisers are a new addition to BOMAG's product range – the RS 250 and RS 300.
  • Indeco cuts up New York City’s old Kosciuszko Bridge
    November 23, 2017
    An Indeco ISS 45/90 is proving essential for demolishing the old Kosciuszko Bridge in New York City. New York City’s old 1.9km Kosciuszko Bridge, which crosses Newtown Creek connecting Green Point, Brooklyn with Maspeth, Queens, has been out of service since April. By the end of the year, the polygonal Warren through-truss structure will be no more. To replace the old bridge, in 2009, the New York State Department of Transportation planned the construction of two cable-stayed replacement bridges.
  • Improved airport for Thimarafushi atoll
    August 29, 2014
    Thimarafushi forms part of the Thaa Atoll lying in the Indian Ocean but access has been limited in the past. However the construction of a new airport planned by the Maldives Government will help develop the tourist trade, boosting the local economy. Most visitors previously used the country’s two international airports, using these as hubs for flights to the country’s six domestic airports. This has limited travel to only a few of the country’s 1,192 islands, of which around 200 are inhabited. As a result,