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

  • New Midtown Tunnel open in Virginia
    January 30, 2017
    A project to construct the second Midtown Tunnel link in the US state of Virginia alongside the original connection has taken an important step forward – Mike Woof writes Commuters in the US state of Virginia will be pleased that the new Midtown Tunnel is now open to traffic, as it will help to boost capacity and cut congestion on the busy US 58 route connecting Norfolk and Portsmouth. The 1.13km tunnel link has been built to link with the interchange at Brambleton Avenue and Hampton Boulevard in Norfolk
  • CET opens new laboratory to service UK’s infrastructure projects
    October 23, 2017
    With over £300 billion of investment in infrastructure planned over the next four years in the UK, materials testing firm CET is gearing up to service a lot more projects – Kristina Smith visited the newest laboratory near Heathrow to find out more. The CET Group has ambitious plans. Over the next four years it wants to double the size of its business, which in the last year turned over £27 million. “There’s a lot of positivity out there,” said Gary Corrigan, managing director of the group’s infrastructu
  • Efficient new asphalt compactors from leading firms
    March 12, 2014
    New asphalt compactors from leading firms offer greater versatility and lower running costs - Mike Woof writes
  • Aggregates production innovations delivering efficiency
    August 1, 2017
    EvoQuip, the newest division of Terex Corporation, is launching a Cobra 230 impact crusher later this year, to sit alongside the Cobra 260. The 24tonne machine will offer a production capacity of 140-150tonnes/hour in asphalt and construction recycling. The Cobra 230 is 11.3m long and 2.46m wide, or 5.15m wide with a side conveyor. It features a quick set-up time and the machine can be moved onsite without having to stop the crusher. Keestrack says that its novel H4 tracked cone crusher is light and compact