May 2008

Quantum Shift

GPS technology has significantly increased productivity. Contractors say the impacts on their businesses are positive, as long as they respect the complexity of the tasks that it handles.

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By Don Talend

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Much like a phenomenon that the overall US economy experienced starting in the late 1990s, the excavation and grading profession has seen a quantum leap in productivity thanks to technology in the past decade. Just as the US enjoyed Alan Greenspan’s “dream economy” of low inflation, low interest rates by historical standards, and low unemployment—phenomena due, largely, to office communication and computing technologies that boosted the productivity of service firms—grading and excavation contractors are utilizing powerful global positioning system (GPS) technology to significantly increase their productivity. Evidence of this leap in productivity is a drastically shortened interval between surveying and site preparation.

GPS has two main applications in the industry that shorten this interval: three-dimensional site modeling and machine control. The site-modeling application converts two-dimensional survey data into a 3D schematic that gives the contractor a precise layout of the job site, not to mention a permanent record of the location of features such as utilities for future reference. The machine control application represents a logical next step; construction equipment operators can view an image of the 3D model from inside the cab and adjust the dozer or grader blade, or excavator bucket for slight variations in slope and cross slope for cuts or fills.

GPS site layout systems use a base station that receives satellite signals and transmits the signals to one or more “rover” stations that are used for grade checking on the job site. The satellite signals allow precise marking of grade on the job site, not to mention a much more efficient and less labor-intensive process of laying out a site than the traditional method that relied upon tools such as lasers to measure grade and distance, as well as a staking crew. When the site layout data is incorporated into a 3D model that is displayed inside the cab of earthmoving equipment, the operator has a visual representation of site grading and such features as utilities.

To take the capability of GPS a step further, the contractor can have one or more GPS antennae mounted on a machine so that the operator can mark precise machine location in real time as the antennae receive satellite signals from the base stations. Besides allowing the operator to determine where the machine is located on the job site relative to topographical features, a GPS machine-control system also pinpoints blade or bucket location relative to the desired grade and the operator grades as necessary by adjusting the blade manually, or specially designed software automatically adjusts these attachments during operation.

Grading & Excavation Contractor recently spoke with several contractors who discussed the many benefits of using GPS for site layout and machine control. They also mentioned how using this technology has affected their business and what contractors must do to ensure a successful adoption of it.

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Increasing Productivity
Contractors overwhelmingly say that the main advantage of GPS technology is an increase in their productivity, often allowing them to take on and complete more projects with the same human and equipment resources.

Grant Garrett, president of Garrett Excavation in Hot Springs, AR, points out that his three Topcon base stations and three rover stations are used every day, and one individual now lays out a site, a task that used to require two workers. “Before we had the GPS, we had a total station where we would do all of our engineering and layout, and we kept a crew busy doing that pretty much around the clock,” he says. Now the company has equipped four-wheel all-terrain vehicles with rover station pole kits that take readings of various locations on the job site; more precise readings require a stationary range pole. The data gathered by the rovers are compiled into a 3D digital terrain model (DTM) whose data is used in takeoffs and estimating as well as for guidance of Garrett’s dozers and motor graders that have GPS antennas mounted on their blades. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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K6EL

October 23rd, 2008 4:33 PM PT

Basically a decent article but I wonder when journalists are going to understand how high accuracy RTK GPS actually works. You need to understand what rold the base station plays. I've never read an article that gets it!

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