Skip to main content

TBM built in China for Indian project

A TBM built in China will be used for an Indian project.
By MJ Woof April 29, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
CRCHI is supplying a massive TBM for the Mumbai Coastal Road project in India - image © courtesy of CRCHI

A large diameter tunnel boring machine (TBM) has been built in China for a project in India. Manufacturer CRCHI has constructed the TBM at its main facility in Changsha, China. The TBM will be used to help construct a tunnel stretch for the Mumbai Coastal Road Project.

The TBM will be shipped from Shanghai to Mumbai for the coastal road project. Featuring an excavation diameter of 12.2m, this Slurry TBM is 80m long and weighs 2,300tonnes. It has an installed capacity of 7,280kW and a gradeability of 5%. It will be the largest diameter TBM ever used in India. 

The Mumbai Coastal Road Project is a key project for Mumbai and will measure 29.2km in length. The road will connect Marine drive to Kandivli. The CRCHI Slurry TBM will be used to drive a 1.92km tunnel comprising part of the route.

The tunnel construction work will have to deal with complex geological conditions that require excavation in deep overburden. The tunnel drive will pass through a compound stratum of basalt, breccia and shale, with the maximum uniaxial compressive strength up to 200MPa.

To solve the challenges, CRCHI Slurry TBM is designed with a mixed cutter head with eight spokes and eight panels, which will enable the machine to bore in the complicated strata for a long distance. To solve the problems such as mudcakes forming on the cutterhead and slurry discharge blocking, the TBM is fitted with a big-diameter slurry feeding port and several slurry flushing lines to increase the flow rate of slurry. In addition, 508mm diameter disc cutters are fitted to the TBM to improve machine’s rock breaking capacity and prolong its lifespan.  

In addition, this CRCHI Slurry TBM benefits from innovative features, such as a dual-chamber indirect slurry control system, a dual-circuit automatic pressure system, high-torque and retractable main drive, as well as a high-power slurry circulation system.

This is the 5th TBM supplied by CRCHI for projects in India.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Advances in tunneling machines coming to market
    November 19, 2015
    A diverse array of new tunnelling technologies will help boost productivity and cut project costs, while boosting quality - Mike Woof writes The worldwide market for tunnelling projects continues to be strong, with a series of major projects underway or planned for the future. These good market conditions have helped fuel research and development in new tunnelling equipment, designed to be more productive, more efficient and more reliable and able to deliver a higher quality of work. Drilling and blas
  • India’s US$13 billion expressway project
    August 14, 2024
    India’s US$13 billion Delhi-Mumbai expressway project should be complete in 2025.
  • Chinese manufacturers competing in quarrying segment
    March 5, 2015
    Chinese firms are now gearing up to tackle the quarrying market - Mike Woof writes. One of the key developments of note for the bauma China exhibition in late 2014 was the number of Chinese manufacturers now looking to compete in the quarrying sector. Also of note was how Western manufacturers are also taking the emergent markets seriously, developing machines to counter this increased competition from China. In many cases Western manufacturers have partnered with Chinese firms, bought out Chinese companies
  • Construction equipment launched at Bauma China
    February 15, 2012
    The 2010 bauma China event did, as expected, break all previous records, with companies launching more new equipment than ever. Patrick Smith reports. The queues at the entrances on the first day of bauma China 2010 indicated what the rest of the week had in store. As thousands of visitors poured through the gates each day to view the latest in construction equipment at the expanded Shanghai New International Expo Centre, the organisers knew they were looking at another successful event.