Skip to main content

Chinese road building with Caterpillar excavators

A contractor in China is using specially modified excavators to carry out key tasks for road construction work The firm has acquired a number of Caterpillar excavators that have been supplied in adapted form for the project. The company is working on a contract to carry out work on a 4km road project in Nanning Road, Tianfu New District in Chengdu City. Nanning Road is located in a mountainous area and the ground conditions are challenging, with a great deal of hard rock present. Typically, this type
March 24, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
A Chinese firm is using a Caterpillar excavator in a novel configuration for road building work
A contractor in China is using specially modified excavators to carry out key tasks for road construction work

The firm has acquired a number of 178 Caterpillar excavators that have been supplied in adapted form for the project. The company is working on a contract to carry out work on a 4km road project in Nanning Road, Tianfu New District in Chengdu City.

Nanning Road is located in a mountainous area and the ground conditions are challenging, with a great deal of hard rock present. Typically, this type of ground would be blasted and loaded into a truck to be hauled away. However this is not possible for the contract as blasting is not allowed in the Tianfu New District project.

As a result the contractor had to come up with a different solution to move 2 million m3 of material in a 15-month period as required by the terms of the deal. And the firm opted to use Caterpillar ‘frontless’ excavators fitted with special rock arms and rippers.

Sanhe Rental purchased the machines through Caterpillar OEM Solutions, with the excavators fitted with a rock arm and ripper for this special application. In China, ripper applications on excavators are often used in areas where blasting hard rock is not an option.

After some research, the firm rented five 40-70tonne excavators to test their capabilities in these conditions. When the firm put these machines to use, it found that the Caterpillar 374 unit worked better than the competing models in the conditions. However the rent/month was prohibitive to using a full fleet of Caterpillar machines. After further consideration, the firm opted to purchase a used Cat 349D L Excavator with a rock arm attached to handle the hard rock on Nanning Road.

The Cat equipment worked well but the contractor was faced with another dilemma; a single machine was not enough. But if the firm purchased additional excavators and removed the boom, stick, and bucket, then those portions would be left unused and it would still need to purchase the rock arms and rippers separately. Additionally, these modified excavators would no longer be covered by warranty, meaning it would pay a high price for any service required.

All of these factors would hit profits, so the firm was keen to find a solution. As the company has had a long partnership with local Cat dealer ECI-Metro, it was introduced to Caterpillar OEM Solutions. The contractor explained the needs of the job to Caterpillar OEM Solutions, which then offered a package of equipment tailored to the task in hand. The firm was able to purchase a Cat OEM Frontless Hydraulic Excavator, which was approved for the specific application with a rock arm and ripper. ECI-Metro worked with a selected manufacturer on completing the machine, which is still covered by warranty through Caterpillar OEM Solutions. Not only did the newly outfitted 349D2 L OEM Frontless Excavator cost less than his original standard 349D2 L purchase, but it also avoided having an idle boom, stick, and bucket.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Mobile plant provides asphalt answer at airport
    September 30, 2013
    The project to upgrade Kassel-Calden Airport in Germany is providing a much improved facility. Opened in 1970, the original airport had a short runway that was not suited to predicted traffic volumes and current standards so a complete reconstruction of the facility has been carried out. The €271 million investment in the facility is expected by the developers to provide a strong economic benefit to the area. The original airport was built on an area of over 200ha and a new and longer runway has been con
  • A fresh breath of air
    July 16, 2012
    With a new wave of exhaust emission regulations coming shortly, engine manufacturers are well on track to develop new solutions as Mike Woof reports A wave of technological advances has made the current generation of diesels the cleanest industrial engines ever produced. Driven by tightening controls on emissions, manufacturers have had to develop an array of innovative solutions that will help cut particulate and NOx being emitted from the tailpipe. When the phased reduction in exhaust emissions was first
  • A new Indian cable-stayed bridge will improve transport connections
    March 2, 2015
    A major new cable-stayed bridge is being constructed in India - Partha Bratim Basistha reports. In India the construction of a major cable-stayed bridge is underway that will boost connections from capital Delhi to its surrounding areas. The bridge is being built in a bid to ease growing interstate traffic movement between Delhi and the surrounding North Indian states of Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh. Named Signature Bridge, this is a landmark structure due to its design aesthetics and
  • Drilling rig meets the utility supply challenge
    April 11, 2012
    A tricky utility supply project has been carried out in difficult conditions in Germany, without disturbing a village access road. The drilling work for the project was operated by boring contractor Beermann and the site was located on a plateau some 5km from the nearest village.