Blasting is common when carrying out routing operations on sub-bases of limestone, slate, granite, or other types of rock. This causes vibrations, noise, and dust.
In road construction, you not only find sub-bases that are too soft or not strong enough, but also those that are extremely hard – too hard to easily build a road on with the required profile. This typically applies to construction projects in the mountains and in other areas with rocky subsoil. In this case, routing operations must first be conducted.
The routes cut into the rock by the surface miner form the ideal road bed for the layers of pavement.
In locations where blasting isn’t even possible due to nearby houses, industrial facilities, or railway tracks, routes are now more frequently created by cutting the rock with surface miners. This more environmentally friendly method extracts the rock without vibrations.
Even as the carbide picks on the cutting drum continue to cut, the crushed stone is loaded onto trucks by a slewing discharge conveyor. Thanks to its uniform grain size, it can be used as a filler without further treatment. The road can now be paved without difficulty on the precision-profiled surface.