Skip to main content

Gubler gets down with a Kemroc EK 100 chain cutter

Boulders are usually removed from site by breaking them with a hammer and then using a backhoe to extract the rubble: a time-consuming process. Swiss construction company Gubler, however, used a Kemroc EK 100 chain cutter to cut down on processing time as well as wear and tear on company equipment. With an EK 100 chain cutter mounted on their 22tonne excavator, Gubler excavated the foundations, footings and service trenches in the typical local molasse rock. The project is a large residential complex and
May 1, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Foundation and trenching: Kemroc chain cutter in Swiss molasse rock
Boulders are usually removed from site by breaking them with a hammer and then using a backhoe to extract the rubble: a time-consuming process.


Swiss construction company Gubler, however, used a 8755 Kemroc EK 100 chain cutter to cut down on processing time as well as wear and tear on company  equipment.

With an EK 100 chain cutter mounted on their 22tonne excavator, Gubler excavated the foundations, footings and service trenches in the typical local molasse rock. The project is a large residential complex and parking area in the town of Mettmenstetten near Zurich. Work was done with speed and accuracy, according to the company. The job was also completed without creating noise or vibration to annoy people living nearby.

The overburden contains boulders until they hit bedrock. Kemroc’s EK (Erkator) range of chain cutter attachments includes a cutter chain with round attack picks that runs between two cutter drums. This allows the attachment to excavate narrow trenches exactly to the width required; there is no gap between the cutter drums which requires standard types of drum cutter to operate with a sideways swinging motion. Compared to a lengthways drum cutter, a chain cutter operates a lot more smoothly and with lower cost for consumables as well as less wear and tear on the machine.

At the job site in Mettmenstetten, Gubler excavated 2,500m³ of material while excavating 60cm-wide trenches with depths up to 5m. “The EK 100 enabled us to keep the trench width to specification while maintaining vertical side walls resulting in significant savings in time and transport costs for the removal of broken material,” said Markus Gubler, managing director of the company.

“In addition, we were able to use the EK 100 on our 22tonne excavator. If we had to use a breaker we would have had to go up to a larger size excavator. A large part of the excavation was completed in 170 working hours and we also achieved significant savings in fuel costs.”

At the same time, within an area of 4,500m² a total of 120 footings and the perimeter of the underground car park foundations were excavated to within a 5cm variation. “When it came to lining the periphery walls for the underground garage, we were able to save an enormous amount on concrete,” he said.

According to the company’s calculations, the chain cutter covered 50% of its cost on its first job.

“Compared to using a hydraulic breaker which creates noise levels emanating from the job site over 100 dB(A), with the chain cutter it was down to 70 dB(A),” said Gubler.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tough tunneling challenge in Italy
    May 25, 2016
    New levels of efficiency and sophistication are being seen in the latest earthmoving machines coming to market - Mike Woof writes. The earthmoving equipment segment accounts for one of the largest parts of the total market for construction machines. All around the world excavators and articulated dumptrucks (ADTs) can be seen operating on construction sites. With a massive array of manufacturers offering these machines, it is no surprise that the segment is hotly contested. In developed markets firms are en
  • Strabag on the edge with a Dynapac DF145CS paver from Atlas Copco
    June 10, 2015
    When asphalting the inside of the newly raised edge of a water dam, Austrian road construction company Strabag faced a challenge. The paver had to be operated at an angle of between 34-41 degrees with material fed into the hopper from a ledge just 2.8m wide on the edge of the dam. The Waldeck 2 kidney-shaped hydroelectric station is located on a mountaintop about 500m above sea level on Lake Eder in central Germany. The dam, owned by global energy group E.ON, has a perimeter of about 3km. An important pa
  • Buckets of construction potential
    June 13, 2012
    Doosan Infracore Construction Equipment has extended its range of attachments for excavators with a new line of Europe-made heavy duty buckets and quick couplers. The South Korean company says the new attachments, which are intended for all markets in Europe, Middle East and Africa, can be mounted quickly and easily, providing cost-effective and productive solutions for a number of applications, including digging, trenching, loading, mining and quarrying. The new quick couplers are said to allow the ope
  • Evonik’s VESTENAMER, part of the rubber road revolution
    February 21, 2019
    Rubber modified bitumen is gaining ground, according to speciality chemicals business Evonik The intensified search for better road durability and lower traffic noise - both environmental concerns - has meant an increasing market for rubber-modified bitumen. At the same time, raw material costs for asphalt and specifically for asphalt modification compounds have increased considerably, creating another obstacle to cost-effective road construction. The stakes are high for getting roads more durable