The Grading and Excavation Contractor Blogs

The Blogger

John Trotti Grading & Excavation Contractor Editor

More from this blogger

  1. Training It Starts with Your Image
  2. Is there a Moore's Law in Construction
  3. Technology How Much Is Enough
  4. Getting Set for Our Technology Issue
  5. World of Concrete 2010 - Still a Firm Foundation
  6. The Bottomest Line
  7. Life Beyond the School of Hard Knocks
  8. Developing and Using Standards
  9. A Late-Night Present From the Senate
  10. Commitment Rather than Change
  11. Lessons From Power-Gen
  12. The Action Desk
  13. NGVs for Fleet Operations
  14. Stimulus Funds for Infrastructural Repair Show Me the Dough
  15. Are You Ready for the GHG Emissions Inspector
  16. Do Statistics Tell the Safety Story
  17. LiDAR What is it and Why Should I Care
  18. Consolidation Happens
  19. Equipment Theft in a Tough Economy
  20. ICUEE 2009
  21. Standardization
  22. Causes That Matter
  23. Hard Hats and Safety Harnesses - but Situational Awareness Above All
  24. Signs of the Times That Make Sense
  25. The Human Element
  26. Infrastructure in Dire Need of Overhaul
  27. All in it Together
  28. Pride in Accomplishment It's Part of Our Nature
  29. Y2K Plus Ten
  30. CNH Parts & Service Remanufacturing
  31. Construction Accidents Better But Still Too Many
  32. Not Like Your Father's Crawler
  33. Equipment Theft A Bigger Business Than Ever
  34. Two Days, Three Nights in Peoria
  35. Regulatory Compliance
  36. Fugitive Dust
  37. A Case for Dirtmanship
  38. Are We Still Having Fun
  39. The Best BMP for Erosion & Sediment Control is Knowledge
  40. Snoopy's Doghouse
  41. Leave Close at the Horseshoe Pit
  42. Bailouts, Stimuli, and our Future
  43. Tsunamis in the Sea of Change
  44. Rising to the Challenge of Change
  45. Fox in the Henhouse
  46. Writing Checks Our Resources Can't Cover
  47. Trenching Safety
  48. Dimensions 2009
  49. Bottom Lines
  50. Speed, Precision, and Awareness
  51. World of Concrete 2009
  52. Paperless iGrading & Excavation Contractor-i
  53. Tightening the Belt One Notch at a Time
  54. Operation Head Start
  55. Stimulating Thoughts
  56. Start the Year with PMA
  57. Staying Out of the Crosshairs
  58. Employee Free Choice Act (FCA)
  59. Keeping Pace with Workforce Change
  60. Forward to the Future
  61. Investing in Training and Technology
  62. Focusing on the Future
  63. Southern California Fires
  64. Bottom Lines
  65. In Pursuit of the Digital Jobsite
  66. Situational Awareness
  67. Coming to Grips with Change
  68. Sweeping Up the Scraps
  69. How're the Fish Biting Today
  70. Welcome to the New Site!
view all

GX Contractor Editor's Blog

August 31st, 2009 10:30am PST

Whoop-De-Doozy

Posted By John Trotti Comments

If talents from this life are transferrable to the next, I’ll have a lock on making whoop-de-doos for motocross courses around the globe. Just put me at the controls of a dozer and turn me loose…which is exactly what John Dice, senior training manager for Topcon Positioning Systems in Livermore, CA, did.

After pointing out the features of the John Deere 750J, and pointing me down a relatively smooth track, he gave me my final instructions for making a couple of manually controlled 2/10s slices with the transmission control set to at a comfortable mid-range speed. “Stay out of the lake,” was his final warning as I clanked off in search of fame and glory.

Things went well for the first 6 feet, which was when the tracks dropped into the leading edge of my cut, reorienting the blade to a greater angle. Thus began a series of gouges varying in depths up to 6 inches or so. By the time I reached the end of the southbound pass my humility quotient had risen to a point just below the “draw sword and write your haiku” line, but I was now ready to show my true metal to the group of witnesses who were eagerly awaiting my return run.

“I’ll show them,” I said as I plowed through a rapid 180-degree turn, took a deep breath, lowered the blade for action, and dialed in maximum speed. What followed was a sequence of pitch-and-dive maneuvers, augmented this time by rolls that left a trail of butchered earth worthy of the Baja 1000. Clearly I had gone well past the “open up your belly” point and was about to do so when Dice came up to congratulate me.

“Great job,” he said. “Perfect for showing what the 3D-MC2 system can do.”

All I wanted to do at that moment was to go lie down in one of my unintended swales and have someone bury me, but as he explained array of displays and how to engage the blade control system, I saw that my ordeal was far from over.

Lined up on the track once more with the original site plan set into the system’s memory, I flicked the little knob on the blade control handle to the “on” position, pushed the transmission lever forward, once again ran the speed control full up, and, my right hand in my lap, fully expecting to see the machine bury itself in one of my trenches.

On the outbound leg, the dozer bogged from time to time trimming off the more serious of my prior achievements, but by the time I returned to the starting point, the entire track was at the site plan specification.
There are a number of features that make the 3D-MC2 system different from its predecessors; chief among which are its employment of 3-axis gyros to stabilize the blade’s position in space, the set of dozer-specific algorithms allowing it to anticipate pitch moments, and it’s five-times increase in blade-control instructions. Any one of these would be an improvement, but it the combination that really does the trick. Face it, at 10 kph, you could ready the Baja 1000 course for your family sedan in less than three weeks…but please don’t.

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get GX Contractor Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our GX Contractor email newsletter!