Martina (tunnel boring machine) explained
The
Martina tunnel boring machine (officially named as the
S-574.
[1]) is a hard rock
tunnel boring machine built by
Herrenknecht AG. It is the largest hard rock tunnel boring machine in the world and has been used for drilling the Sparvo Tunnel, a part of the larger
Variante di Valico project in Italy.
[2] Specifications and operations
The Martina cost 60 million USD, has a shield diameter of 15.55 metres, an excavation diameter of 15.62 metres, a length of 130 metres, a total weight of 4500 tonnes and an annual operating consumption of 62 million kWh. The cutterhead required 12,000 kW of power whilst the overall vehicle requires 18 MW total installed capacity to function.[1] [3] The machine started work on the Sparvo tunnel in 2011, with drilling of the 2430-metre north tube completed in 2012. The drilling of the 2600-metre south tube was finished in 2013, bringing the 5-kilometre tunneling project to an end.[4] [5] [6]
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Galleria Sparvo. Herrenknecht AG.
- Web site: A Herrenknecht giant reaches its target. 17 May 2016.
- Web site: 5 Biggest Tunnel Boring Machines in the World. ASME.
- Web site: TBM Martina ended Sparvo tunnel - tunnelbuilder.com News.
- Web site: Significant breakthrough at Sparvo - TunnelTalk.
- Web site: Toto Costruzioni Generali.