Conference Proceedings
VIII Australian Tunnelling Conference
Conference Proceedings
VIII Australian Tunnelling Conference
TBM Design and Performance of Today - A Rapid Development - Where Will it End?
The last decade has seen a very rapid development in TBM tunnelling. Some trends are purely technical or economical and others relate more to preferences of different interests. Power levels have more than doubled and thrust levels too. Shield machines are developed to be able to handle harder rock and the open TBMs are made more feasible for `difficult' rock. What is right and what is wrong is more a matter of opinion, but one thing is certain: TBMs now are a useful tool and no longer an experimental work-shop for the enthusiasts.
This paper highlights some recent developments and indicates some probable future ones. A few features that have increased the open TBMs' ability to cope with ever harder rock and also to overcome problems with poor rock are discussed in detail, using the Atlas Copco JARVA Mk 27 - the most powerful TBM built so far - as a reference.
This paper highlights some recent developments and indicates some probable future ones. A few features that have increased the open TBMs' ability to cope with ever harder rock and also to overcome problems with poor rock are discussed in detail, using the Atlas Copco JARVA Mk 27 - the most powerful TBM built so far - as a reference.
Contributor(s):
S Hartwig
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- Published: 1993
- PDF Size: 0.85 Mb.
- Unique ID: P199306030