Skip to main content

Highway installation

In the UK a civil engineering firm is using Wacker Neuson's novel vertical digging system (VDS) on a major contract to up-grade the motorway communication network alongside the M6. The Highways Agency contract involves work along a total of 64km between junctions 32 and 37 and McDermott Construction, together with sister company McFour, has been tasked by main contractor Peek Communications to open a 960mm deep x 410mm wide trench and install large termination boxes every 500m. The job involves bedding four
February 6, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Productivity is good with the Wacker Neuson machines on the M6 contract and a VDS equipped 38Z3 zero tailswing machine has achieved an output of 285m/day
In the UK a civil engineering firm is using 1651 Wacker Neuson's novel vertical digging system (VDS) on a major contract to up-grade the motorway communication network alongside the M6. The Highways Agency contract involves work along a total of 64km between junctions 32 and 37 and McDermott Construction, together with sister company McFour, has been tasked by main contractor Peek Communications to open a 960mm deep x 410mm wide trench and install large termination boxes every 500m. The job involves bedding four-way sealed ducting in stone with the trench then being backfilled on a continuous basis.

McDermott recently took delivery of nine new Wacker Neuson machines from local dealer Beddoes Machinery Sales of Montgomery for this 24 week contract. The order comprised five mini excavators, a 28Z3, 38Z3, 50Z3 and a pair of 2404s, plus a 6503 and three 9503 wheeled machines with triple booms used for placing stone and backfilling duties. Of the minis, three are equipped with VDS, which allows the operator to tilt the machine's entire superstructure by up to 15º. This feature is important at the M6 project as a lot of the digging has to be carried out on sloping embankments.

Where the embankment is steeper, the machines only have to dig a minimum amount of material away in order to accommodate the up-hill track and then deploy the VDS to level the cab. In the even steeper sections and where access by even a mini is impossible, the company has to resort to a purpose-built trenching attachment.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Brazilian contractor uses novel methods for high quality road
    January 5, 2015
    Cold-in place recycling method provides fast road rebuild in Brazil In Brazil a road contractor has carried out a high quality road rebuilding job, using novel techniques. Contractor Brown Brown is located in Santa Teresinha in the state of Bahia and recently carried out a two-week job for the company to rehabilitate sections of highway BR-381. The highway is an important route in Brazil and runs from Sao Paulo to Belo Horizonte. Highway BR-381 or Rodovia Fernão Dias, as it is called, stretches some 576km
  • Well structured maintenance
    January 4, 2013
    Major bridge maintenance and replacement projects across the world are extending the life of many impressive historic landmarks as Guy Woodford reports The Tamar Bridge, part of the main A38 trunk road linking Saltash in Cornwall with Plymouth in Devon, south west England, marked its 50th anniversary with a steel deck resurfacing project involving Stirling Lloyd's Eliminator bridge deck waterproofing system. Jointly owned by Plymouth City Council and Cornwall Council, the Tamar has a suspended length of 642
  • Simex RS 16 planer for creating rumble strips
    March 22, 2017
    Simex says that its new RS 16 planer for creating rumble strips is an efficient alternative to costly specially designed machines or small manual equipment Rumble strips created by intermittent milling of the wearing course offer the advantage of lower production costs and a higher durability than those made using elastoplastic adhesives - laminates. Compared to adhesives, rumble strips created by surface milling also have the important advantage of being indented and not raised, a characteristic that av
  • Bobcat launches mini excavators, starting with the E26, E27 and E27z
    April 9, 2018
    Bobcat is launching a completely new generation of 2-4 tonne mini excavators this year. The first of the new machines are in the 2-3 tonne range - the E26 (operating weight 2,560kg), E27 (2,610kg) and the E27z (2,700kg). All the new models already meet the upcoming European Stage V engine emission regulations and comply with weight limits for easy trailering, according to the company. The focus has been on operator comfort and the units form a new flexible machine platform with different configurations of