The
Burlington Northern railroad has a number of tracks that run
through the eastern part of Spokane. Neither the general contractor
nor the city planners could move the rail lines that intersected
the intended route of the water transmission lines or cut through
them.
Gonzales
Boring and Tunneling, Inc., of North Plains, Oregon, was contracted
to execute six bores under different track locations. Under
the direction of founder Jim Gonzales, this specialty boring
and tunneling contractor has worked in 11 western states and
Hawaii for the past 15 years. In this time period, the company
has run up against the toughest soil conditions imaginable,
but none of its experience could have prepared it for the rocky
conditions underneath these rail tracks.
"There
was a total of six crossings on this job. The glacial till
we bored and tunneled under was the roughest I have even seen," explained
project manager Tom Malcolm. "The ground was filled with
what I call river run, a porous sandy mix of cobble and boulders.
What we didn't expect to hit were boulders the size of Montana!"
Malcolm and
his crew auger-bored the first of two casings under the three-track
rail line. On this 200-foot bore, positioned six feet away
from what was to be the second bore, the auger boring system
successfully installed a 48-inch-diameter casing with 5-1/2
feet of cover from the surface to the bottom of the pipe.
During the
first of these two bores, Malcolm and his crew feared losing
railbed support using their auger boring machine. "A couple
of times the loose glacial-till material fell down as the head
of the auger boring machine advanced forward," stated
Malcolm. "Many times on this first bore, the rocks were
too large to move through the auger flighting, so we had to
go in and physically pull them out. We went into the pipe to
pull out this spoil every time we had road-bed material come
down. That's why we decided to go with the 23-inch HammerHead
Mole pneumatic tool on the second bore to pipe-ram the 54-inch-diameter
casing with its 0.72-inch thick walls."
With a pneumatic
pipe ramming-tool, the fear of creating voids is eliminated
since there is a solid steel pipe in the earth at all times
with the spoil filling up inside the casing. Railroads are
increasingly taking note of pipe ramming as an excavation tool
when casings need to cross their lines. With such a tool, they
do not have to worry about interruption of service, voids during
construction or post-project settlement.
To accomplish
the pipe-ramming operation, the crew prepared a 40-foot by
12-foot launch pit according to the engineer's plans of a 0.25%
grade. The plans also called for the large casing to reach
180 feet to the other side, which had the three-rail track
line with only six inches of fall. The launch site used auger
boring tracks to set the casings on and maintain the prescribed
grade when pushed through the soil.
"Because
of our experience with auger boring and pipe ramming with the
16-inch diameter HammerHead pneumatic tool, we decided to use
both technologies," explained Malcolm. "The heavy-hitting
23-inch-diameter pneumatic tool would ram the casing. Then
every 20 feet or so, we planned to use the auger flighting
to clean out the spoil to lessen the drag and weight from the
spoil accumulating inside the pipe."
No lubrication
system was used on this pipe-ramming job, even though bentonite
and water mix had been used for the auger boring done previously
on this site. According to Malcolm, "When we used bentonite
in these soil conditions before, we poured in what I thought
were tons of it and all it did was dissipate into the porous,
sandy conditions because of the boulders in the soil. The stiff
clay on this bore that we were trying to soften up was not
the problem; it was the huge boulders we ran into."
Progress
in the rocky conditions was slower than expected. After pushing
in every 20 feet of casing in the early going, the crew used
the auger boring machine with its auger flights to move spoil
out of the casing. But more than once, progress was halted
and winch systems were used to move huge boulders from the
inside of the casing.
"The
four-inch-thick steering head we had attached to the lead pipe
eventually fractured some of the boulders that had significantly
slowed our progress," stated Malcolm. "We were sure
that we had run up against boulders that were wider than the
54-inch-diameter casing. More than once, we had rocks much
larger than what the augers could pull out."
Crew members
used pneumatic air drills to puncture the rock inside the pipe
and drill in eye bolts. Winch cables were then attached to
the eye bolts, and a winch was used to haul out the fractured
pieces. Considering its hardness, some crew members estimated
the rock to be 30,000 psi granite.
With only
a couple of weeks off for the holidays, Gonzales Boring and
Tunneling, Inc., kept at the nettlesome project until it reached
the 180-foot mark of the pipe ram on the opposite side of the
rail lines in early February.
"This
was a tough job, and we all wish we could have completed it
earlier," said Tom Malcolm. "Pipe ramming with the
23-inch tool was probably the only way we could have got the
job done at all."
Written
by: Richard Yach Technical Writer Des Moines, Iowa
Provided
by: Vermeer Manufacturing Company Pella, Iowa
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