July 7/17 JULY ISSUE -7 | Page 16

Meet our giant tunnelling machines Digging the new tunnels was a 24-hour a day job, 7 days a week. Crossrail used eight tunnel boring machines (TBMs) to construct the new rail tunnels under London. The giant machines carefully weaved through the capi- tal’s congested sub-terrain, snaking between the existing Tube network, sewers, utilities, and London’s hidden rivers at depths of up to 40 metres. Like giant underground factories on rails, each of the custom made Crossrail tunnelling machines had an external diameter of 7.1 metres, weighed around 1,000 tonnes and measure around 150 metre in length – the equivalent of 14 London buses end-to-end and a staggering 143 buses in weight. Each machine has a rotating cutterhead at the front and a series of trailers behind housing all the mechanical and electrical equipment. The TBM is effectively a large metal cylinder with a rotating cutting head at the front and conveyor belt at the back to remove the earth. At the front of the TBM is a cutting wheel, which is pressed against the tunnel face by hydraulic cylinders.  Inside the cutting wheel the disc cutters and scraping tool loosen the material. The loosened material is removed from the cutter head via a screw conveyor, which moves the material through the back of the TBM and out of the tunnel via a con- veyor belt. The tunnel face is continuously monitored by pressure sensors that check the turning power of the cutting wheel and the screw conveyor, keeping track of the material that has been excavated.  The TBM makes use of the concrete rings using hydraulic rams which are at the back of the cutter.  Once the machine has moved sufficient distance the next concrete ring is installed.  Crossrail’s concrete tunnel lining is designed to last 120 years. An in-built laser guidance system ena- bled the tunnelling teams to ensure the ma- chine remains on course, ending up to within a millimetre of where it needs to be. During Crossrail’s tunnelling phase, each TBM was operated by ‘tunnel gangs’ com- prising of around twenty people – twelve people on the TBM itself and eight people working from the rear of the machine to above ground.  The tunnel gangs worked in 12 hour shifts, tunnelling 24 hours per day, 7 days per week.  Six earth pressure balance TBMs were used to construct around 18 kilometres of twin-