Czech contractor Metrostav recently achieved 105m of tunnel excavation in a record-breaking six days. But it will be consistent performance and progress that will see Iceland’s Dyrafjordurgong Tunnel in the remote Westfjords region open on time and on budget.
The 5.3km Dyrafjordurgong Tunnel is costing around €69 million and due to open in September 2020. It should make the biggest economic impact on the region since the 9.1km Vestfjardagong Tunnel opened in 1996. It will save around 25km and 45 minutes of driving along what is now a mountainous, partly gravel road with high winds and frequent snowfall.
The mountain through which the tunnel is being excavated is principally basalt, the most common volcanic rock on the planet. Although the rock isn’t tough, there is a lot of variety, from coarse crystal several millimetres wide to much finer-grained basalt. Some less-common minerals, including chabazite and the calcium-rich thomsonite, have been found in cavities and pockets within the basalt. This means the tunnelling team needs a process to analyse the rock and the profile following each blast.
“Each round of planning, drilling, charging, blasting, clearance and reinforcing takes around seven hours,” says Josef Malknecht, Metrostav project manager.
“We’ve completed a round in as few as six hours and 16 minutes and we aim to achieve a minimum of 5m progress on each round. We plan for 80m progress per week, but our goal is to achieve consistent weekly progress of 90-95m over the long term,” says Malknecht. “Time is short and any breakdown can undo weeks of good progress.”
Continual progress is paramount because with a single-face operation, any equipment problem halts the entire operation. Metrostav needs a drilling jumbo capable of consistent performance. The team chose a new Sandvik DT1131i as its sole tunnelling jumbo. Only one operator is needed to control the entire drilling process with multiple booms. Also, purchasing a new machine reduces the risk of downtime.
”We can take the data from the actual drill, look at the penetration rate and learn something from the drilling to improve things next time. For at least three months of the year, south portal access roads are usually closed, with scheduled opening windows of just a few days every four weeks,” Malknecht says. “With transport options limited, we have to stock up on supplies and pay close attention to maintenance and the reliability of everything we need. We used Sandvik rigs on our previous tunnel project, so we knew we could rely on them as a partner for this project, too.”
“Our operators are able to manage multiple booms from a single   comfortable position,” says Metrostav site manager Tomáš Janoušek. “This   is important for us as a small team.”
Sandvik's   solution was one Sandvik DT1131i tunnelling jumbo - suitable for   tunnels of 20-177m² and one Sandvik DT1130-SC as a backup. Engineers use   iSURE tunnel management software to create the drill patterns and  blast  design and to analyse feedback from the DT1131i. 
     
Land  surveyor Lubomír Krchňavý says iSURE software is a major improvement  on previous tools. “It has improved functionality, but most importantly  it’s much more accurate,” he says. “We make one drill pattern and then  it is very easy to modify that to make another,” he added. “We can take  the data from the actual drill, look at the penetration rate and learn  something from the drilling to improve things next time.”
Also,  iSURE automatically creates folders for the curve table, tunnel  profiles, drill plans, navigation laser data, navigation sets and  related files such as photographs.
Sandvik’s  Ari Laitinen, business development manager, Underground Drilling, says  he is pleased to see a customer getting the full benefits from the  combination of Sandvik DT1131i and iSURE drill and blast design  software. “It is nice to see customers make the plan at the bottom of  the blasting round, gaining the full pull-out and good profile quality  after blasting,” he says.
Laitinen  is also pleased to see the customer consider the total cost of  ownership. “Metrostav sees beyond the net penetration rate,” he says.
Remote Norway
Norway’s  northern community of Bratland sees hundreds of visitors in the summer  looking to walk the mountains as well as swim, sail and fish in the  clear water of the fjords. But family vehicles often mingle with large  trucks along the narrow access roads in the area, only 10km south of the  Arctic Circle.
PNC Norge  has the contract to renovate one such road. Route 17 is a coastal road  that is slipping slightly and runs at its narrowest past the Liafjellet,  a tall mountain with a steep face.
Avalanches  in winter often completely close the access road, cutting   off  communities and businesses north of the area. At these times, the   only  form of transport is aircraft and boat, both of which are often   delayed  or cancelled due to poor weather.
Norbert    Hoerlein, site project manager, has been working in the tunnelling    industry for 20 years, mostly in Austria and Germany. It’s his and PNC’s    first tunnel project in Norway. “The US$330 million project is a 5km    stretch of road that will travel through two mountains – 1.9km through    Liatind, plus a 400m tunnel through Bakliholtan and then bridging  over   the Olvikvatnet lake,” he says. The road will be 8.5m wide –  better for   large trucks – and avoid the avalanche-prone steep mountain  face. 
The   main  challenge during the tunnelling process is to get as little    over-profile and under-profile as possible,” says site engineer Ines    Hagspiel. “That’s why we need a drill rig that is very accurate, so that    we only get a minimal theoretical profile,” she says. 
     
“The common   rock here is gneiss and mica schist – old, solid rock, perfect for   building tunnels. The Sandvik equipment can drill 5m blasts at a time –   quite a difference from the 1m or 2m blasts Hoerlein is used to in   central Europe.”
“This is   why the technology is so important here,” Hoerlein says. “In Austria  and  Germany, where you can only drill 1m at a time, you can’t go too  far  wrong with each blast. But here in Norway, if you drill by eye  only, you  can quickly end up 1m away from your planned track. You need  technology  to make accurate, fast progress.”
PNC   has been trialling Sandvik iSURE software, made possible by the  jumbo’s  onboard 3D scanning system. “The benefit of a 3D scanner is the   possibility for immediate reaction, correction and speed of process –   that’s the main thing,” says Marin Kulaš, the onsite geodata senior   surveyor contracted by PNC.
“It   helps the operator see the contour, if there’s an under-profile or an   over-profile and he or she can react in place in real time. And the  scan  is like a fingerprint, so during the next round when the scanner  makes a  scan, it searches for identical points between the point cloud  and the  previous scan. Then you’re ready for the next round. The whole  process  of the navigation by scanner is under four minutes. That’s  fast,” says  Kulaš.
iSURE  3D reporting  tools also make it easier to keep clients informed,  increasing the trust  between client and contractor because it’s a  transparent way of working  and makes that process simple. “You deliver  accurate information about  the project in a straightforward way and  then you can arrive at  solutions together,” Hoerlein says.
“We   deliver a 3D model of our tunnel to the client,” says Hagspiel. “With   it we can show them where we have under-profile and over-profile and   where we may have to drill new holes for reblasting.”
For   this tunnelling project, the first for PNC in Norway, Sandvik provided   the new Sandvik DT1131i three-boom jumbo along with rock tools, drill   bits and rods. Sandvik iSURE software and 3D scanner were trialled for   the first time here in a project of this nature, offering high-level   planning and analysis capabilities. Sandvik also supplied technical   support and onsite training for operators at the site, working to ensure   that the equipment, systems and support met the specific needs of the   customer.
“It’s an   absolutely stable system,” says Hoerlein. The iSURE system can measure   the exact position of the bolts, which in turn can be delivered to the   client in 3D imaging to a very high accuracy. “Otherwise, a surveyor has   to measure tens of thousands of bolts and guess where the end sits in   the mountain. This is one step into the future already.”