 
     The adoption of new technology will boost productivity for machinery users - Colin Sowman writes
     
Since the inception of earthmoving machinery, equipment manufacturers have been striving to make the process faster, quieter, easier and more fuel efficient. Now many manufacturers are looking at ways to improve the efficiency of drive systems to reduce complexity, maintenance and fuel use. 
     
In an effort to help all operators match the performance of the best, many equipment manufacturers are including machine guidance and control technology as options on their latest models. 
     
Machine guidance technology has been around for some time but the uptake has been slow for a host of reasons – not least that most systems had required retrofitting (increasing on-cost and creating warranty concerns) while the longevity and service support was unproven. In addition the connectivity (Wi-Fi, GPS and broadband), have been unreliable and expensive and the lack of trained operators was a major hurdle. 
     
Today most of the major manufacturers offer machine guidance and control systems as options on the standard build, the electronics have proven robust and connectivity has improved immensely. This is true for the road machinery sector with companies such as 
     
Volvo CE points out that machine guidance offers a major boost to productivity, carrying out tasks more accurately and faster, while reducing the number of personnel working on site and boosting safety. 
     
Caterpillar produces graders and dozers – two of the most complicated machines to operate - and it was an early adopter of machine guidance and control technology. The company’s Cat Grade factory-integrated precision grading system is available on excavators, graders, dozers and scrapers as well as pavers and mills, and is said to help improve grading efficiency for both new and experienced machine operators over a wide range of applications. 
     
According to Jason Hurdis, of Caterpillar’s Global Construction and Infrastructure Division, the increase of Grade technologies helps operators improve production with higher quality and safety in less time and using less fuel and materials. 
     
On a broader scale, telematics systems are being used to increase machine uptime through remote monitoring of the machine’s health and the way it is being used, such as detecting and reporting excessive idling. Such systems have become something of a standard offering from many suppliers and the bigger the machine, the more likely it is to have a telematics system.  
 
In Caterpillar’s case it offers 
     
Compaction  is another area where technology is helping operators achieve  right-first-time results. Caterpillar offers its Compact technologies  while BOMAG’s intelligent compaction system is called Variocontrol and  uses integrated compaction measuring technology for instant feedback.  The operator can select the required compaction value and the technology  provides an instant display of the comparative compaction level to  improve compaction quality while minimising the number of passes, fuel  usage and the time taken.
     
Hurdis  points out that such systems can reduce both over- and under-compaction  of materials.  GPS tracking and telematic feedback can also be used to  ensure (and prove) that the area has been compacted to the required  level. 
     
One feature all  these systems have in common is the reduction (or even elimination) of  the need to stake-out the site and any reduction in the number of  workers on site amid moving machinery has to be a bonus in terms of  safety. This is possible because the site plan has been loaded into the  electronics and the onboard systems know the machine’s precise location  in three dimensions and where it is digging, grading, compacting or  paving. 
     
The efficiency  gains, time savings and safety benefits available from this type of  technology are becoming evident on some of the most demanding job sites  around the world. 
     
The  degree to which 3D and machine control technology can benefit  roadbuilding projects is evident from the experience of Canadian company  Windley Contracting.
The  company won a tender to widen a two-lane road  into four lanes on a  9km  section of Highway 97 between Winfield and  Oyama in the District  of Lake  Country, BC. This entailed extensive  earthmoving, building an   embankment, two overpasses, two tunnel  crossings and the tie-ins. 
     
For    this project the company installed Trimble’s GCS900 Grade Control    System on its excavators and motor grader. With suitable technology to    create the baseline data (GPS, GPS and laser or Total Station), the    system can also be used on dozers, scrapers, soil compactors, asphalt    pavers, trimmers and milling machines.  
Beyond   fitting the GCS900 Grade Control System with dual GPS on its machines,   Windley used Trimble’s Internet Base Station Service across the  project.  After his operators were trained on the grade control system,  Windley’s  Civil Division manager Kyle Webb noticed significant  productivity gains  during excavation work.
     
“During   bulk excavating work, our operators were able to get very close to   tolerances the first time. They weren’t over-excavating because they   could clearly see where they were digging to, which cut down on trim   work by approximately 75%,” said Webb.
     
“We   used to have a gradesman working alongside our operator 10 hours a  day,  running line to determine cut/fill. Now, there’s no waiting, so  our  operators can get straight to work. Right there, productivity went  up  50%,” he said.
     
The  full 3D  control system puts the site plan - design surfaces, grades and   alignments - inside the cab for operators while the exact position,   cross slope and heading of the blade is measured using GPS. The onboard   computer compares this position information to the design elevation to   compute cut or fill to grade. The cut/fill data drives the valves for   automatic blade control and provides additional visual guidance to the   operator for up/down to grade and right/left to a defined alignment. 
     
Two   months into the excavation phase, the team performed a cost analysis  of  using the technology. Webb estimates savings at approximately   $2,500/week by not relying on a full-time surveyor for excavator work.   Eliminating 75% of staking cut more than $150,000 from the costs. He   estimated that with the money saved on the surveyor, staking costs and   the reduction in trim work, the system paid for itself in one week. 
     
“From   my perspective, the greatest payback came when we were finishing the   slope of the road. We were able to hit grade within the specifications   and it was fully automated. For fine grading for paving we had to be   within 10mm and for paving subgrade within 25mm - and we hit those   tolerances every time.”
 
     
         
         
         
        


