Skip to main content

Topcon machine control units take the heat off an Alaskan contractor

Juniper, spruce, cranberry, cottonwood and rose. Most people think of pine trees and berries amid beautiful country fields. But for one contractor based just below the Arctic Circle in the US state of Alaska, the names represent a successful job completed using machine control. Valley General Construction recently finished a US$350,000 contract for the upgrading of country roads in the local borough of Matanuska-Susitna. The colourful names belong to roads in a heavily wooded residential subdivision located
December 4, 2015 Read time: 4 mins
Machine control systems helped boost project quality in Alaska
Juniper, spruce, cranberry, cottonwood and rose. Most people think of pine trees and berries amid beautiful country fields. But for one contractor based just below the Arctic Circle in the US state of Alaska, the names represent a successful job completed using machine control

Valley General Construction recently finished a US$350,000 contract for the upgrading of country roads in the local borough of Matanuska-Susitna. The colourful names belong to roads in a heavily wooded residential subdivision located in the borough, not far from the town of Palmer, population about 6,500.

Valley is a medium-to-small size contractor – up to eight employees – based in Palmer. Local roadwork and commercial projects are the bulk of the business but the company also works at times in Anchorage, only about 70km away and – with a population of about 300,000 –is the state’s largest city.

In 2014, the Matanuska-Susitna Borough decided on a two-year plan to upgrade the subdivision’s dirt roads that are laid out in a grid pattern, roughly square and with a total length of 1.5km. The objective for year one is to raise the embedded dirt roads to grade and then let them “winter over” – settle down – so that in year two they can be paved.

“Since the roads are embedded below grade, there have been major drainage problems,” stated Brian Hooks, project manager and co-owner of Valley General Construction. “We needed to bring the road not only up to grade but also build in a culvert to address the water run off.”

The borough’s engineers produced CAD drawings showing the 3.6m-wide roads, culverts almost a metre wide and the cut-ins for 50 driveway approaches.

“I took the engineers’ drawings and used 342 Topcon MAGNET Office Site to create a site model and files that could control the excavator and dozer we used on the project,” said Hooks.

But Hooks first needed to upgrade an older and limited machine control system so he consulted GPS Alaska, based in Anchorage, and received additional training and help to select a robust system for the company’s 178 Caterpillar dozer. Valley General purchased the Topcon 3D-MC2 machine control designed to access all satellites and provide position updates up to 100 times per second.

The 3D-MC2 sensor combines a gyro, compass and inertial sensor to measure the X, Y and Z positions as well as the roll, pitch, yaw and acceleration of the dozer. The Topcon system connects to both GPS and GLONASS satellites.

Additionally, Valley purchased a Topcon X62 excavator grade control system for its 233 Hitachi ZX210-6 hydraulic excavator that has an operating weight of 21,900kg and a bucket force of 158kN. The project was also the first job where Valley had used machine control technology on an excavator.

The embedded roads were already several inches below grade. Excavation brought each road to a uniform 10 inches below grade before lifts of fill soil, crushed stone and a binder-layer of reclaimed asphalt pavement – RAP – were added.

Once completed, the roads will winter over until next spring. Alaskan winters are long so the borough wants to adjust the roads after the several freeze-thaw cycles that can occur during a winter season before a finished asphalt surface is paved.

The subdivision project required about 3,060m3 of fill dirt and nearly 6,120m3 of #5 crushed stone. Additionally, 76m of culvert pipe was laid down. “We completed in two weeks,” said Hooks. “Our accuracy is spot on, so we’ve eliminated wasted time with rework.”

Without machine control technology, the job would have taken twice as long and had more risks of delays.

Hooks said Valley’s machine operators can literally go out on to the job and know, by looking at their monitors, what needs to be done. “The project is stake-less, so we don’t need surveyors or have delays when a stake is run over. Plus, we also eliminated the need for a worker to walk along with the excavator for spotting and checks,” he said.

“We’ve been using the technology for so long, it’s hard to imagine running a project without it. If someone took it away, people would walk out the door…probably following me, it’s that important.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sandvik’s DT1131i jumbo and iSURE software in Iceland and Norway
    August 14, 2019
    Sandvik’s DT1131i three-boom, electro-hydraulic jumbo, iSURE tunnel management software and the latest drill bit hardware were recently put to the test in Iceland and Norway* Czech contractor Metrostav recently achieved 105m of tunnel excavation in a record-breaking six days. But it will be consistent performance and progress that will see Iceland’s Dyrafjordurgong Tunnel in the remote Westfjords region open on time and on budget. The 5.3km Dyrafjordurgong Tunnel is costing around €69 million and due
  • Increased dozing capacity from Caterpillar
    October 9, 2018
    Caterpillar claims that its new D8T Dozer delivers more productivity, better fuel efficiency and greater ease of operation. The firm says that the new dozer is designed to move more material in less time, at a lower cost/tonne, while delivering a faster return on investment. The bulldozer features a new fully automatic transmission, which the firm claims offers a productivity gain of up to 18%, without using more fuel. Added blade capacity, increased power and steering performance, and technology options
  • Improving tunneling method selection
    December 11, 2015
    The tunnelling sector remains one of the most active segments of the construction industry worldwide, fuelling demand for equipment However, there have been issues with the efficiency of the selection process for the most suitable tunnelling method for a project in the past. With this in mind, the Italian hydraulic breaker manufacturer Indeco has been working on a new algorithm that allows a contractor to optimise the tunnelling method selection. The firm said that this system has been developed becau
  • Bertha readies for more Seattle SR99 Alaskan Way Viaduct tunnel work
    July 27, 2015
    Bertha, one of the world’s largest tunnelling machines will resume work underneath the US city of Seattle in November, nearly two years after breaking down. Bertha, at 17.4m diameter, began her journey in July 2013. She was boring a path to relocate a 3.2km stretch of the elevated State Route 99 Alaskan Way Viaduct, built between 1949 and 1953 and which carries around 100,000 vehicles daily. The elevated section will be moved underground allowing the creation of public space along Seattle’s downtown w