Skip to main content

Repairing utilities quickly with new tool

A new tool offers the chance to speed repairs to utilities, reducing disturbance to drivers and pedestrians alike in busy urban areas. The conventional way to break into an existing cast iron main has been to expose it from the surface in a pit and then hit it hard with something until it breaks. However, this is no longer considered either safe or efficient. Instead, Utility Innovation Solutions (UIS) has delivered a more effective tool, the Click Stick.
April 4, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
The Click Stick device can make breaking iron utilities pipes a quicker and more efficient task
A new tool offers the chance to speed repairs to utilities, reducing disturbance to drivers and pedestrians alike in busy urban areas.

The conventional way to break into an existing cast iron main has been to expose it from the surface in a pit and then hit it hard with something until it breaks. However, this is no longer considered either safe or efficient. Instead, Utility Innovation Solutions (UIS) has delivered a more effective tool, the Click Stick.

UIS has designed the Click Stick for breaking into cast iron mains pipes safely without the need for brute force from the site crew. This manually operated tool is quick and easy to use. Once the pipe to be accessed is exposed, the lightweight Click Stick is manually lowered into the excavation and using its C-section construction is positioned around the pipe.

There is a guide/location arrow to show where the centre of the unit should be placed in relation to the pipe to ensure the breaking action is applied to best advantage. When in the right position, the operator activates the battery powered hydraulic pump, which engages a vertical ram to grip the pipe. As the force on the ram is increased the pipe breaks in a controlled and safe way with the operator at a safe distance from the fracture when it occurs.

The unit has been extensively tested during its development and is now being introduced with a number of key rental and utilities firms in the UK amongst repair crews.

Related Content

  • Getting a foothold on road safety
    September 3, 2012
    The Indian businessman, Rohit Baluja, has become one of the most articulate and outspoken advocates of road safety in developing countries. A leading figure in his country’s shoe industry, Baluja was converted to the cause that has become his lifelong passion during regular business trips to Europe
  • A new additive for self-de-icing asphalt mixture roads in winter
    December 14, 2020
    A new additive from Iterchimica aims to help minimise icing on asphalt surfaces in winter conditions
  • Hitachi helps to build a better Stockholm
    November 19, 2024
    The ZE135 electric excavator has been put to the test on a high-profile development in the Stockholm Green Innovation District. This new growth area for technology and sustainability is being developed with the goal of renewing and building urban spaces with climate-smart solutions.
  • Wrong time to end right turns?
    March 15, 2024
    Banning right-hand turns after stopping for a red light is gaining momentum in the US. But debate continues about whether it will result in fewer incidents between vehicles and alternative mobility users. David Arminas reports.