Skip to main content

No strings attached: a Wirtgen SP 15i in Mobile

A Wirtgen slipform paver SP 15i operated fully automatically to produce kerbs near Mobile, in the US state of Alabama, as the company explains. When a new residential area is developed, the individual contract work sections are often very detailed. Roads and paths have to be paved and access roads to the individual plots constructed. Various traffic areas are often separated by concrete structures such as kerbs. These kerbs can be either pre-cast parts or monolithic profiles produced right on the job sit
May 9, 2019 Read time: 4 mins
Around it goes: a Wirtgen slipform paver SP 15i in Mobile
A Wirtgen slipform paver SP 15i operated fully automatically to produce kerbs near Mobile, in the US state of Alabama, as the company explains


When a new residential area is developed, the individual contract work sections are often very detailed. Roads and paths have to be paved and access roads to the individual plots constructed. Various traffic areas are often separated by concrete structures such as kerbs.

These kerbs can be either pre-cast parts or monolithic profiles produced right on the job site by 2395 Wirtgen inset/offset slipform pavers. The construction company Ammons & Blackmon Construction decided to go with monolithic profiles.

A&B’s SP 15i has produced hundreds of running meters of kerbs in a newly-developed residential area in Mobile, located in Mobile Bay on the Gulf of Mexico – working in both tight- and wide-radii as well as different heights and widths. Cost-effective as this method is, one time-critical and quality-sensitive issue usually remains to be dealt with – tensioning string lines. The new-build project in Alabama shows that this job can also be dispensed with. An SP 15i produced all the kerbs fully automatically.

As in many new-build projects, a 3D digital terrain model was available at the Mobile job site. Thanks to its certified standard interface, the SP 15i concrete paver can also be equipped with 3D systems manufactured by other suppliers alongside AutoPilot, Wirtgen’s own 3D control system. Data is transmitted to the machine via a 3D interface and various systems such as the RTK GNSS receiver or automatic total stations are employed during paving.

The sensors mounted on the machine permit precise measurement while the machine is in operation. These systems constantly check that the specified and actual values of the paving parameters correspond. If no 3D digital terrain model is available for a project, users can enlist the aid of Wirtgen’s AutoPilot Field Rover and create a new digital data model directly on the job site.


When working in the small town of Mobile, the paving team of Ammons & Blackmon had to switch between different work sections several times during every work shift. It was obvious that dispensing with time-consuming surveying, tensioning and checking of string lines would greatly increase the profitability of the project.

The supply of material is a much simpler affair, too. Trucks can quickly reach the SP 15i and drivers needn’t be constantly looking for tensioned string lines.
 
An additional feature of the slipform paver is a trimmer which enables speedy progress. It levels the base to ensure optimum paving. The trimmer drum design is based on Wirtgen milling technology, one of the company’s core competencies. The telescoping trimmer with its helically positioned point-attack cutting tools guarantees uniform profile paving – in a single pass.

The project in Alabama also testified to the wide range of monolithic profiles that the SP 15i can produce with its many standard and special profiles for offset paving. In Mobile, alongside the conventional kerbs, the to-do list included a number of contract work sections that are typical for the US. These include kerbs with integrated gutters, flat gutters between private driveways and public roads that can be driven over as well as complete footpaths. The slipform paver placed the concrete with a width of 0.3-1.8m and a height of 15-30cm.


Greater paving precision at lower costs: now further advanced by Wirtgen, AutoPilot 2.0 can be used with the SP 15i and SP 25i models to create all manner of offset and inset profiles with even greater efficiency and precision. To this purpose, the 3D system either uses a previously created data model or a new digital data model is produced on the job site – a simple task with the Field Rover survey pole.

The AutoPilot 2.0 software automatically checks the imported or newly-created data for any kinks affecting the steering and grade control. The user can correct unwanted kinks in the model data directly on the tablet with the aid of graphic editors.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Airport expansion for the Maldives assisted by Trimble
    September 6, 2019
    An airport redevelopment and expansion project in the Maldives has been assisted by the use of technology from Trimble. In 2016 the Chinese firm Beijing Urban Construction Group (BUCG) was awarded the contract for the expansion of the Ibrahim Nasir International Airport on Hulhule island in the Maldives, which is part of the Indian Ocean island group. The massive US$440 million expansion and land reclamation work is intended to boost capacity at the Maldives Airport. BUCG has utilised Trimble field solu
  • Growing niche market for roller compacted concrete
    February 20, 2012
    A growing niche market for roller compacted concrete has prompted manufacturers to offer solutions. Mike Woof reports. Increased demand for roller compacted concrete (RCC) machines in certain applications mean that this is now a growing market, with manufacturers having developed new machines for this sector. RCC comprises uncrushed and/or crushed aggregate, hydraulic binders and may also contain concrete additives. It is mixed in a concrete mixing plant on or near the job site and one of its main benefits
  • Efficient asset management delivers
    April 25, 2013
    Maximising the economic benefit of infrastructure assets can be achieved through delivering better quality maintenance. Increasing utilisation of infrastructure follows on from those assets being in better condition. Clearly by tracking infrastructure condition closely, huge gains can be made in addressing technical issues before they become more serious and more costly, as well as minimising disruption. In UK city Birmingham, high resolution aerial photography from Bluesky is helping the city council under
  • Optimising operations with construction software gains
    May 20, 2015
    Innovations in construction software are helping boost project efficiency and optimising project operations – Clive Davidson writes Over the past decade, while construction engineers have been putting up buildings or infrastructure, software engineers have been developing a parallel universe where virtual buildings or infrastructure can be created in ever increasing detail. What started with 2D architectural drawings in computer-aided design (CAD) systems, has become a multi-dimensional world, with 3D ge