Skip to main content

Sandvik on drill at the Liantang/Heung Yuen Wai Boundary project

The Liantang/Heung Yuen Wai Boundary Control Point project is creating a seventh land crossing, including highways and tunnels, between Shenzhen in China and Hong Kong There are already two control points on the eastern side of the New Territories between China and Hong Kong - at Man Kam To and Sha Tau Kok – to access eastern Shenzhen and Guangdong. All cross-boundary traffic travelling from these points must use busy local roads in Hong Kong and Shenzhen before joining the major highway systems. The US
April 4, 2018 Read time: 4 mins
Sandvik’s Ranger DQ500 was on site and on drilling duty
The Liantang/Heung Yuen Wai Boundary Control Point project is creating a seventh land crossing, including highways and tunnels, between Shenzhen in China and Hong Kong


There are already two control points on the eastern side of the New Territories between China and Hong Kong - at Man Kam To and Sha Tau Kok – to access eastern Shenzhen and Guangdong. All cross-boundary traffic travelling from these points must use busy local roads in Hong Kong and Shenzhen before joining the major highway systems.

The US$3.2 billion control point will connect existing expressway systems in Hong Kong and Shenzhen to cut travel time between Hong Kong and eastern Guangdong, as well as southern Fujian and Jiangxi.

Contract 6 involves building a new highway, viaducts and a 700m road tunnel by the end of 2018 at a cost of around $770 million. The work is being done by a joint venture of China Road and Bridge Corp from mainland China, Taiwan’s Continental Engineering and Hong Kong-based Kaden Construction - the CRBC-CEC-Kaden JV.

“We needed surface drill rigs for open cut of the hills by drill and break. Tunneling jumbos for tunnel excavation and then high-quality mobile crushers to crush the excavated rock,” said K Y Chow, construction manager for the joint venture.

For drilling duty, a Ranger DQ500 and a Ranger DX700 were working on site but the joint venture also bought three Ranger DX800 surface drill rigs.

The drill rigs were used for the open cut of the hills by drill and break. Drill and blast was forbidden because blasting was not permitted on the type of hill cut along the highway.

The Ranger DX800, however, proved to be highly suited to the application. One of the new features is the revolving superstructure enabling large drilling coverage from the standard 17.6m² to a US standard 26.4m². When rotating, the rig’s stability is guaranteed because the counterweight remains always on the opposite side of the boom.

The rig also features a THC700 drilling control system that automatically adjusts to changing rock formations. It also sends an optimal amount of power to the rock to ensure smooth rotation, solid rock contact and fast penetration in different rock conditions.

Low fuel consumption is achieved by an ecopackage that includes engine RPM adjustment. Tramming force has been boosted by over 10%, according to 325 Sandvik.

For excavation of the dual two-lane tunnel, Sandvik supplied three DT1230i's and one DT820-SC tunneling jumbos. These were required because each tunnel is 14m wide and 11m high for two lines of traffic on the two main tunnels, along with some small cross passage tunnels. The Sandvik DT1230i is a computer-controlled three-boom electro-hydraulic drilling jumbo for tunneling and cavern excavation of 20 211m² cross sections, including face drilling, bolt hole drilling and mechanised long-hole drilling.

The DT1230i is coupled with the iSURETM tunnel management programme, intelligent iDATA control system, newly-launched high-frequency RD525 drills, robust booms and advanced drill string guides.

Sandvik QJ241 tracked jaw crushers have been crushing excavated granite for the tunnel’s road base. The QJ241 has handled the 600mm feed-size to produce a 250mm product. This is further fed into the second Sandvik QJ241 to produce a 40mm product for tunnel refilling.

The self-propelled QJ241 is Sandvik’s smallest compact tracked jaw crusher. It is fitted with a hydraulic raise-and-lower facility on the main conveyor making it ideal for hard rock applications.

A full service and maintenance agreement was signed between Sandvik and the CRBC-CEC-Kaden JV, as well as Sandvik providing all spare parts, lube and oil.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Magni’s new telescopic handler reaches a record 35m
    April 21, 2015
    Magni has launched the world’s highest telescopic handler - the RTH 5.35 which stretches up to 35m. “Ours is the biggest in the world; the maximum reach of our competitors is 32m,” says Magni’s president and founder Riccardo Magni. “The normal market is 21m and 25m. We are trying to push the market up.” Since the machine was launched in November last year, Magni has sold to 20 customers in India, Turkey, UK, France, Holland, Sweden and the US. “The dealers like it because it is something different for them
  • Sandvik DC125R is new member of DC hammer drill family
    February 13, 2013
    Sandvik DC125R is a new member to the proven Sandvik DC family of compact, rubber-tyred top hammer drill rigs. The fully remote-controlled, hydraulic and self-propelled mini-sized drilling unit on a four-wheel drive carrier, is for drilling 22–45mm holes, and replaces the former Sandvik DC122R, one in the series of rigs originally launched in 1988 under the product name of Tamrock Commando. “A range of job site tests show that the new model offers better manoeuvrability than ever before. This is thanks to t
  • Indonesia crushing job for RM unit
    January 17, 2018
    A crushing unit from Austrian manufacturer RM is being used to produce materials for road infrastructure projects in Indonesia. The unit has replaced a combination of jaw and cone crushers used previously on the project. The RM 70GO! 2.0 has been used to crush river basalt and is the first mobile RM crusher to have been utilised in Gorontalo, located in central Indonesia.
  • Sandvik’s QI34 Prisec Impactor on show in the Netherlands
    June 10, 2015
    The Sandvik QI341 Prisec HIS Impactor has proven to be an essential machine for recycling applications in the Netherlands following recent demonstrations by Kuiken Group. Kuiken, which became a Sandvik Construction distributor for mobile crushing and screening products in 2012, recently hosted a demonstration of the HIS Impactor, complete with hanging screen system. A closed circuit crushing system means the machine can produce a calibrated product without the need for further machines. Its compact si