1 / 68

Civ420-Construction Engineering M1: Equipment Management

The Module in a Nutshell. Equipment operations and managementSafetyUtilizationTechnology Equipment productivitySite Conditions Operator Site Layout Maintenance Equipment costsOperation costs Acquisition costs (ownership vs. rental). Resource Management. Labor. Information. Materials. Equipment.

ida
Télécharger la présentation

Civ420-Construction Engineering M1: Equipment Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Civ420-Construction Engineering M1: Equipment Management Tamer El-Diraby University of Toronto

    2. The Module in a Nutshell Equipment operations and management Safety Utilization Technology Equipment productivity Site Conditions Operator Site Layout Maintenance Equipment costs Operation costs Acquisition costs (ownership vs. rental)

    3. Resource Management

    4. Resource Management (partial)

    5. Module 1: Introduction

    6. Types of Construction Equip.

    7. Very Old

    8. Old

    9. New

    10. Completely new

    11. Laser-guided

    12. ??? ??? ????? ?? ??????? ???????? 95??? ?????? 45000 ?? ????? ?? ????? 5 ????? ???????? ??????? ????? ????? 100 ????? ????? ??? ??? ????? ?? ??????? ???????? 95??? ?????? 45000 ?? ????? ?? ????? 5 ????? ???????? ??????? ????? ????? 100 ????? ?????

    14. Major Issue 1: safety

    15. Major Issue 1: safety

    16. Major Issue 1: safety

    17. Major Issue 1: safety

    18. Major Issue 2: Pollution

    19. Hybrid Backhoe

    20. Module 1: Reading Materials Gransberg, D. D., Popescu, C., and Ryan, R. C. (2006). Construction Equipment Management for Engineers, Estimators, and Owners:, CRC Press Chapter 2 & 3 Only Free at Google books: http://books.google.com/books?id=__KfMapExTgC Caterpillar performance handbook, Caterpillar Tractor Company [UofT call number TL233.5 .C37] Nunnally, S. W. (1977). Managing construction equipment [UofT call number TH900 .N85] or Nunnally, S. W. Construction Methods and Management

    21. Module 1: technology and Productivity

    22. Earth Moving Equipment Soil and Site Conditions Production estimation

    23. Production Equations

    24. Soil Volume Characteristics

    25. Bank: Material in its natural state. Also called in-place or in-situ. Measurement: BCM Lose: material that has been excavated or loaded. Measurement: LCM Compacted: Material after compaction: Measurement: CCM

    26. Production Estimation: Experience and Common Sense

    27. Moisture Content

    28. Loadability & Trafficability

    29. Swell Swell (%) =((density in bank/density in loose) -1) x 100 Example: Bank density: 1661 kg/m3, upon excavation, the loose density became 1186 kg/m3

    30. Swell and Shrinkage Factors

    31. Pit Excavation: Example

    32. Solution

    33. Excavating and Lifting Excavators and Crane shovels Draglines Backhoes Clamshells Trenching and Trenchless Technology Cranes

    34. Excavation

    35. Production Factors: excavators Soil conditions Angle of swing Bucket fill Size Fill factor Cycle Time Job efficiency Operator Site condition Equipment conditions

    36. Shovels

    37. Shovels

    38. Production Estimation: Shovels Soil conditions Angle of swing Bucket fill Size Fill factor Cycle Time Job efficiency Operator Site condition Equipment conditions

    39. Excavator Production

    40. Example: Shovels

    41. Solution: Table, Factors and Formula (Always)

    42. Job Management: shovels Swing angle: minimize [how?] Catch all: Lost time during operations Position of truck and shovel use the time between arrivals to set work area Keep an optimum distance between shovel and truck

    43. Draglines:

    44. Example: Dragline

    45. Solution: Table, Factors and Formula (Always) Table or A Formula

    46. Job Management: Draglines Trial operations for optimum mix of angle, boom length, bucket size, weight and attachment position. Minimum swing angle Use the lightest bucket possible 15 degrees Catch all: Lost time during operations

    47. Backhoe

    48. Solution: Table, Factors and Formula (Always)

    49. Job Management: Backhoe Optimum mix of angle, boom length, bucket size, weight and attachment position. Minimum swing angle Do not use to hammer rocks-use ripping or light blasting instead Catch all: Lost time during operations

    50. Trenching

    51. Continuous trenching

    52. Trenchless

    53. Cranes The crane is the primary machine used for the vertical movement of construction materials

    54. Cranes (contd)

    55. Crawler or Wheel Mount

    56. Selection Factors Height of reach required Working envelope Maximum load Time Duty cycle

    57. Stability

    58. Maximum Load Cranes may fail by two different mechanisms: Structural capacity Stability

    59. Nomenclature

    60. Mounting Configurations Fixed base - termed a stationary or free standing unit Climbing - lifts itself on the building structure as the work progresses Mobile - crawler and track

    61. Fixed Base Some cranes are erected (assembled) to a fixed height by other equipment at the start of the project

    62. Fixed Base (contd) There are self-erecting cranes which can increase their height as the project progresses

    63. Climbing Usually climbs through an opening within the structure Must insure that the structures framing has sufficient load carrying capacity to support the add stresses of the combined weight of the crane and the lifted loads

    64. Mobile Cranes Mobile - uses pinned jibs extending from special booms that are set vertically

    65. Selection The two most critical factors to be considered when selecting a tower crane are required Operating radius Lifting capacity

    66. 66 Wind load Tower cranes are wind-sensitive machines because of their high surface contact area Operations should be discontinued when wind velocities exceed the manufacturers maximum permissible in-service wind velocity, this is usually in the 25-30 mph range

    67. Safety: Cranes

    68. Job Management: Cranes

More Related