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| An example of a DTM that did not correctly
feather the intersection of a new road into the old road. |
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There has been a lot of discussion about the requirement in
many states to have a professional engineer or licensed surveyor certify 3D
data prep models for GPS machine control and related construction work. Inevitably,
events are introduced onsite that render a license completely ineffective and
which a professional engineer (PE) or professional licensed surveyor (PLS)
cannot resolve. Such events often tend to involve human error. In this column I
will share some of the stories about these errors and the lessons learned from
them.
Scenario #1: Communication On a fast-track
project that was in operation 24/7 and that included heavy use of GPS machine
control equipment, the contractor had a couple of base stations established
onsite. Everything was swimming along. As the shift supervisor headed home one
night, he received a phone call from a crew member. “Hey boss,” he heard, “is
it a bad thing if we knocked over the base station?” Immediately, the
supervisor began to think of the ramifications of this question, and a swirl of
possible consequences floated through his mind, followed by potential penalties
and other negatives that could spoil an otherwise successful day in the field.
Before the supervisor finished contemplating the possibilities, the crew member
proudly said, “Don’t worry, chief, we put it back up!”
At
that moment, the supervisor realized that this was much worse than he had originally
thought. He responded with the best question one could ask in this situation:
“Exactly when did all this happen?” The answer quickly came: “About two weeks
ago.” At this point the supervisor’s heart skipped a beat, again weighing the
outcome of these actions. Most of the work in the past two weeks had been
controlled using another base station. Although the base station in question
was established onsite, work had not progressed to that area of the site yet.
The supervisor learned that the base station had been knocked over during some
clearing and grubbing by a low-level employee who was devastated by his
mistake. He set it back up and waited several days before mentioning it to
someone else, who realized the importance of the comment and passed it up the
chain of command.
Lesson Learned: A good relationship with staff members will enhance
communication and help to identify challenges early on. Issues that seem
insignificant to some may be critical to the operation of the project as a
whole, so a certain level of education needs to be imparted to all workers on a
site--even to those you never imagined would need to know anything about the
technology and equipment being used.Scenario #2:
Teamwork A contractor tasked with grade
checking had a GPS rover and walked the site checking elevations to ensure that
the heavy iron hit its mark. Although there was nothing peculiar about how this
rover antenna was supposed to be affixed to the rod, this worker did not know
how to correctly attach the GPS unit. As a result, the antenna was connected to
the rod in a flimsy fashion and quivered significantly. As the worker traversed
the site carrying the rod, the antenna wobbled around at the top of the rod and
hit his hard hat with each step he took. This went on for about a half hour
until a fellow worker noticed that a smacking noise periodically occurred
whenever his team member was walking. So he ran over to his team member and
stopped him to disassemble the antenna and reattach it correctly. He then
reshot the data in the area that was compromised by faulty readings.
Lesson Learned: Teamwork is essential for catching problems onsite. To ensure
that teamwork is effective, basic training is critical for all members of the
construction crew, including grade
checkers.Scenario #3: Safety As a
supervisor was heading home after a long day onsite, his cell phone rang. He
answered it immediately assuming it was just a coworker checking on something
trivial. But the caller on the other end was breathlessly repeating, “The base
station is on fire, the base station is on fire!” The supervisor recognized the
severity of the issue and tried to calm the employee.
After
a minute, the worker calmed down enough to say that the base station was
sparking and smoking. The supervisor said, “Pull the power and disconnect it
from the equipment.” In the background, the supervisor heard workers yelling,
“Pull the power! Disconnect it!” This was followed by “I can’t--it’s stuck!”
Then there was a pause. Finally, the caller came back online and said, “Um, the
power was forced into the socket on the base station backward and it looks like
it short-circuited the equipment.” The supervisor could only shake his head and
conclude that this would not be covered by the
warranty.
Lesson Learned: Safety classes for all staff are
imperative--even instruction on the most mundane of tasks should be conducted.
Scenario #4: Awareness Running a dozer with
a new GPS and robotics system installed, an operator was pushing earth and
backed up toward the crest of a hill. As he was backing up, he lifted his blade
at the same time that the center of gravity hit the top of the crest. The
momentum of the blade, compounded with the velocity of the dozer approaching
the top of the hill, flipped the entire bulldozer 180 degrees down the other
side of the hill. Of course, the new GPS antenna system was destroyed.
Lesson Learned: Be aware of your environment, especially when backing
up.Scenario #5: Trust the Machine As a fairly
new operator using GPS machine control to grade an intersection moved his dozer
forward, an odd amount of blade chatter was evident to him. Even though he was
new, he knew something didn’t seem right--harmonic motion was causing the
entire machine to rock. He called his supervisor and suggested that something
was wrong with the machine, perhaps the blade bushings or the
hydraulics.
To the supervisor’s credit, he dropped what he
was doing and came right out to assist. The supervisor couldn’t find anything
wrong with the equipment or hardware and began to question the data set. They
then called the technical support department of the data model software
company. After sending the data set in for review, it was immediately obvious
that the consultant had tied a new roadway into an existing roadway that was
significantly beaten up by age and traffic. The result was an intersection that
had many DTM triangles in it, each reacting to the undulating grades of the
existing road (see the figure on page 58). The consultant identified that the
new road should have been feathered into the existing road rather than slammed
up to match the existing fluctuations. The data was rebuilt with a feathering
solution, and the model worked fine from then on. The blade stopped chirping,
the cab stopped rocking and the data prep company learned a
lesson.
Lesson
Learned: Trust
your machine. It talks to you.Scenario #6: Do a
Headcount On one particular project, the field
crew needed someone to fill a non-technical surveying role. They grabbed the
“print room guy,” a cooperative fellow who was not skilled in surveying. He was
asked to climb down into a manhole and capture the inverts of the various
features, pipe inverts and bottom of structure. He did it all with a positive
attitude. Once the data was recorded, the party chief yelled, “OK, let’s move
to the next manhole.” As they packed up their gear and moved about 300 feet
forward and set up again, they noticed that the print room guy was not among
them. They glanced around and called out to him, but he was nowhere to be
found. Everyone was on the verge of accusing him of desertion when one of the
field crew members popped the manhole cover. Lo and behold, the print room guy
was standing at the bottom with a big smile on his face. “What took you so
long?” was his first question.
Lesson
Learned: Take
nothing--or no one--for granted.A common
thread in all of these scenarios is that training is absolutely essential for
everyone involved in the use of machine control technology on the construction
site. The purpose of highlighting these anecdotes here is to encourage all crew
members to keep up their guard, stay vigilant and support their teammates.