Suction excavator explained

A suction excavator, or vacuum excavator, is a construction vehicle that removes heavy debris or other materials from a hole on land using vacuuming. Suction excavators are meant to be more non-destructive than regular excavators.[1] The suction excavator uses suction fans for the airflow to suck up the material that is then transported into the holding tank.

Hydro excavation, a type of suction excavator using high-pressure water jets, is sometimes referred to as daylighting, as the underground utilities are exposed to daylight during the process.[2] Some suction excavators also use an air filter.

History

Since 1993, RSP UK Suction Excavators Ltd. has produced suction structures mounted onto two, three, and four-axle vehicles, stationary suction units, and custom-made machines.[3] Pacific Tek,[4] also founded in 1993, has created the Angled Vacuum Excavator Tank (1997) and the 180° Swivel Mount Valve Operator (1999).

In 1998, the Mobile Tiefbau Saugsysteme produced another type of suction excavator.[5]

The global market size for suction excavators was estimated to be valued at in 2020.[6]

Uses

Suction excavators are sometimes used for removing earth around buried utilities and tree roots. It can suck up liquids, e.g., water from a hollow. Typically, vacuum excavation loosens the soil with a blunt-nosed high-pressure air lance or water source and vacuums away loosened material.

Depending on the machine used and soil conditions, a 12-inch-square, 5-foot-deep pothole can be completed in 20 minutes or less.[7] Vacuum excavation is sometimes used in conjunction with conventional underground (one-call) locating services. Because of overlapping buried utility lines, locating devices often miss some of the buried utilities on a site and cannot completely or accurately mark a site.

According to New Mexico 811's (NM811) Aligning Change, Locating with Potholing, "One-call paint marks and flags are the first steps in making the process of locating underground utilities safer, the use of vacuum excavation technology adds an additional margin of safety."[8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 365 vacex . 2023-07-10 . Everything You Need to Know About Suction Excavation . 2024-06-06 . Medium . en.
  2. Web site: 2020-09-16 . What is Daylighting Excavation? . 2024-06-06 . cloud-9-services . en.
  3. Web site: History . 2014-06-24 . RSP-Germany.
  4. Web site: pacific-tek.com . 2014-12-16 . pacific-tek.com.
  5. Web site: MTS Suction Excavators . 2014-06-24.
  6. Web site: Saurabh Vijay . Samel . Mutreja . Sonia . October 2023 . Suction Excavator Market Size, Share, Analysis and Forecast 2023-2032 . 2024-06-06 . Allied Market Research . en . A12455.
  7. Griffin, Jeff. Underground Construction. Oildom Publishing, 2001.
  8. 2009 New Mexico 811 Magazine. Published by ACTS Now, Inc.