Hydrodemolition Robot Crushes With Water 292
Roland Piquepaille writes "In 'Robot pummels roads with water', the Augusta Chronicle says that a hydrodemolition robot is going to restore seven bridges in Georgia. "It's a robot that destroys everything in its path with a crushing stream of water 15 times more powerful than a jackhammer. The robot looks like a street cleaner machine on steroids and is expected to begin use August 1 to resurface seven bridges on Gordon Highway from Walton Way to the bridge at the South Carolina state line." This kind of robot needs only two workers to operate it, instead of 15 workers for a jackhammer, is less noisy and more gentle for the foundations. You'll find more details in this summary."
Unions (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Unions (Score:5, Funny)
Because their beer gut that was formerly helpful in keeping the Jackhammer under control now gets in the way of the steering wheel?
Re:Unions (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Unions (Score:2)
Re:Unions (Score:3, Interesting)
They might have to work nights if 8 crews only have 2 machines?
They might get to work many more years in good health, including good hearing?
They are still experiencing trauma from the demise of the buggy whip, gas light and candle industries?
Just guesses of course
BTW, I think GA is a "right to work State", so Unions have less power to keep work in the dark ages.
Re:Unions (Score:5, Funny)
15 workers for a jackhammer? How do they do that?
1 guy on the hammer,
1 guy on the compressor,
2 guys flagging traffic,
1 guarding the water cooler,
1 observer from the Local,
1 QC inspector,
1 caterer,
1 Foley Grip,
1 Best Boy,
1 Personal Assistant to Mr. Hammer Operator,
1 Stunt Double,
1 Foreman,
1 Orange cone supervisor,
and that's only 14!
Re:Unions (Score:5, Funny)
Don't you pay attention? Whenever you have contstruction work going on, you always need 3 or 4 guys on a break. If you don't have 15 workers, you can't keep that many people on the break. It's called rotation!
What I want to know is where the other 11 guys are hiding whenever those 4 guys are on a break.
Re:Unions (Score:5, Funny)
When I was in Japan I saw 5 guys "operating" a wheel-barrow in a train station.
1 person to direct peadestrians out of the way.
1 person to direct the wheel-barrow.
1 person to actually push the wheel-barrow.
1 person to walk 10 feet behind the wheel-barrow.
and 1 person to stand at a distance of 15 feet and supervise.
To top if off the wheel-barrow was empty.
Re:Unions (Score:2)
Jackhammer tip. (Score:2)
You are probably holding your tounge wrong.
OSHA (Score:3, Informative)
.
Re:OSHA (Score:2)
=)
15 workers for a jackhammer?!? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:15 workers for a jackhammer?!? (Score:2, Informative)
(Very funny comment though. :-)
/joeyo
Re:15 workers for a jackhammer?!? (Score:3, Funny)
I don't think the robots are unionized...yet.
Re:15 workers for a jackhammer?!? (Score:2, Funny)
How many [fill in target group here] workers does it take to use a jackhammer?
1 to hold the jack, 14 to move the roadway up and down.
-T
Re:15 workers for a jackhammer?!? (Score:2)
I mean really... imagine... AAHHHHH! The destruction! It burns, it burns my eyes!!
OWWW!!!
Send it to SCO (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Send it to SCO (Score:2, Funny)
Cooling power! (Score:2, Funny)
"Hey kids!" (Score:5, Funny)
"How about a splash of water on this hot summer day?"
"YayyyyAAIIIEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!"
Re:"Hey kids!" (Score:4, Funny)
(For those of you out of the loop, please watch this [imdb.com] movie)
recycle water? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:recycle water? (Score:2)
Re:recycle water? (Score:5, Informative)
Yep:
"The water is not left behind.
"Once the thing gets the water down and pulverized the concrete, workers come behind it with a vacuum truck," Mr. Merritt said. The water is then taken to a treatment site."
Re:recycle water? (Score:2)
Have you guys any idea how much it rains in much of Georgia? If you "vacume up the water" you might as well get an Ark to float it on.
Re:recycle water? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:recycle water? (Score:2)
I knw a lot of waer used to water plants is unpottable.
Re:recycle water? (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:recycle water? (Score:2)
Doesn't the ecosystem still take care of this? Or have we managed to foul things up even worse than I thought?
I am your robot God (Score:5, Funny)
So it's a robot that plays God then? I cast you, bad concrete, into the abys from where you shall never return!
Just as long as it doesn't start running wild and judging humans, or there might be a significant oversupply of liquified lawyers.
Good for water-rich areas, not for deserts (Score:3, Insightful)
Good point (Score:3, Insightful)
There is nothing like driving by an empty lake bed, or not seeing a blue sky for 2 months through all the smoke of forrest fires, that makes you truly appriciate water.
On the subject, in the dorms there were always people who would go turn on the shower and then go take a 10 minute crap while the water was running... or leave the sink full blast while brushing th
Re:Good point (Score:4, Interesting)
Ahhh, you could always tell who the Easterners were. "Defrost the turkey? Yah, just leave it in the sink with the water running..."
Of course, there are still a lot of people out West who still don't get it. Watering lawns with what amounts to drinking water? And they wonder why their water bills are so high...
Re:Good for water-rich areas, not for deserts (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah. In Las Vegas, for example, you aren't allowed to recreate more than one ocean per casino. Any more would just be wasteful.
Re:Good for water-rich areas, not for deserts (Score:2)
(For the overly curious, we did have a few stops at normal places where we were able to do laundry and take showers. Life wasn't bad at all on the road... A great trip indeed. Pictures are here [mac.com] for anyone who is interes
Re:Good for water-rich areas, not for deserts (Score:2)
Not saying it WILL happen, but it'
Re:Good for water-rich areas, not for deserts (Score:2)
Re:Move!!! (Score:2)
Re:Good for water-rich areas, not for deserts (Score:2)
I'm oversimplifying, of course; some of the people switch to pouring new concrete, because it would be a really bad idea to demolish roadways 7 times faster then you repave them. But new technology doesn't eliminate jobs; it just changes them. Not that people aren't right to b
Re:Good for water-rich areas, not for deserts (Score:2)
The thing that surprised me at the time was the lack of restrictions and common-sense approaches (although I'm hoping they'd be more sensitive to such things in the less soggy parts of the count
How is this not bad for the foundation? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How is this not bad for the foundation? (Score:2)
Re:How is this not bad for the foundation? (Score:2, Interesting)
How many workers? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:How many workers? (Score:5, Funny)
To give you context, compare that to the software world, where 'about two' translates to just you, 4 weeks out of the 20 week projection, a pissed off laptop, and a boss that lives and dies by metrics.
--
mcp.kaaos
PSI, water source? (Score:3, Insightful)
However, that is in an environment where the water can be recycled to a good extent as the machine runs... where does this machine get water from, and how many PSI is it dishing out? I'd assume that it requires close proximity to a good source of water, either a fire hydrant or (preferably), a lake/river/etc - as it probably shoots out a lot of water in order to achieve the correct pressure.
I was going to re-read the article and double-check, but the blink tag at the end of the linked tech review just about blinded me.
Re:PSI, water source? (Score:2)
High-pressure water (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:High-pressure water (Score:5, Interesting)
Add a little pulverized rock into a 0.012 inch stream of water at 60,000 psi and you can cut through *anything*. Biggest thing I ever saw was a 17 inch thick slab of titanium plating. The edges end up smooth, cool (or at most warm to the touch) and, if you are cutting something really expensive (or toxic) you can reclaim 99.99% of the material you eroded away.
Waterjet is *the* coolest cutting technology in the world
Flow [flowcorp.com]
Jet Edge [jetedge.com]
Re:High-pressure water (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:High-pressure water (Score:2)
Why the hell would you inject cerium oxide above the orifice when you can just entrain your favorite variety of abrasives into the beam below the jewel?
Re:High-pressure water (Score:3, Interesting)
Injecting the abrasives (garnet in my case) is only a problem if your do not keep the beam entrained within the material your cutting.
I regularly plow through 12" of glass, holding tolerances less than 0.005".
Coming soon to your dental office... (Score:5, Funny)
this bring up something interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
The normal response is there will be 15 people working for the company that makes the automated product, but thats not true.
If I created a device that flips burgers, and cost less then maintaining a staff, people will buy it, and it will replaces millions of workes, far more then it would take to build the things.
I'm not saying we shouldn't automate, I'm just asking what do we do as our jobs per person keeps declining?
Eat em (Score:3, Funny)
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not saying we shouldn't automate, I'm just asking what do we do as our jobs per person keeps declining?
Yes, I remember how gramps lost his job making buggy whips when, 100 years ago today, Ford Motor Company incorporated.
Fortunately, by 1904 he was able to get a job writing C.
What, you say C wasn't invented until the 1970s?
Oh, yeah, he got a job running an MRI.
Oh, wait, I mean, in a genetics lab.
No, that's not right....
Getting rid of laborious, boring, physically punishing jobs that put people in early graves -- look up the etymology of "top-notch" for a real horror, and be glad we've forgotten how that phrase came to be --, and which can be done better, cheap, and faster by machine, is one of the great triumphs, along with medicine and leisure time, of technology.
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:2)
But we live in a society that revolves around money, what happens when everything becomes automated?
If I replace a million people with me neat new device, what do those people do to live?
Thus US is becoming a service society, but what hapens when the service is automated?
Do we tax the automation companies, and give that money back to the people? do we need to become totally socialist? Not the socialism is bad, in and of itself, but it will get abused?
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:2, Insightful)
How 'bout if we cut the number of hours the remaining laborers are allowed to work? c.f. the 30/35 hr work week movements in Europe. That has the added benefit of more leasure time, which means more opportunity for spending money at bars, amusement parts, theatres, what-have-you.
That has been one proposed measure.
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
Your argument has been going on for centuries. One common incarnation of it was "Malthusian" economics -- in the 1700s Robert Malthus predicted that we would all run out of food if the population kept growing and people would die by the masses from starvation. He never accounted for the fact that we can make more food with more technology.
How does it work, then? In a nutshell, seamstress gets replaced by a machine, machine puts
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:2)
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah, I did some serious googling for it too, and couldn't find it.
As I recall, the "top-notcher" was one of two guys on either end of a long, two handled saw. He stood at the top of a pit, and the other fellow stood in the pit, to facilitate cutting logs. Working together, they'd saw the logs.
Of course the guy down in the pit -- the top-notcher's opposite numbre -- had all the sawdust floating down on him, and inevitably he inhaled it. Over the course of about 10 years, he'd inhale enough sawdust to cause lung disease and premature death, disease and death the top-knotcher, by virtue of his position (literally, his position) avoided.
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:2)
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:2)
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:2)
Well, what we should do is go to four-day work weeks and triple the minimum hourly wage. Unfortunately, that ain't gonna happen because that won't help The Man keep up with the Joneses.
At some point, the unemployed will be the majority and they'll get together and start killing a lot of rich people. (Wait a minute, that's already happening...) Eventually the economy will collapse completely, som
Re:this bring up something interesting (Score:2)
there are more robots and automated processes then there are people who need to maintain them. thatnumber will only get bigger.
I'm not saying the technology should stop, but there will be a point at which automated process will sharply out strip the amount of people to keep them together. what then? how does someone get money to eat while there trying to start there own business?
Robots! makes a valid point, the relief from drudgery, but it does not deal with wide spread and gl
How far we haven't come... (Score:2, Interesting)
"Restore Bridge" starts with trashing the old one (Score:5, Interesting)
Due to a chain of snafus, the "floating" bridge sunk one Thanksgiving day. Very nearly sunk the brand new Westbound floating bridge right next to it. (Part of the root cause was the storage of hydrodemolition wastewater in the flotation cells of the bridge.)
Some years later, the records of liability were sealed in a court settlement between the state and the contractor.
Labour Intensive (Score:2)
The machine also produces less noise and dust than a jackhammer, is more powerful than a jackhammer and requires only about two people to supervise it.
They forgot to mention the foreman to supervise the two guys supervising the robot, as well as the three people needed to hold the "SLOW" signs up for the oncoming traffic.
Required joke... (Score:2)
One to hold it and the other 14 to...
It's terrible! (Score:2, Informative)
You! Get your filthy hands off my Aibo!
Re:It's terrible! (Score:2)
oh crap, my tinfoil hat fell off again!
high pressure water cutting (Score:2, Interesting)
A simple search and you will see many different machines that use high pressure water to do their deed. Many years ago I remember watching Beyond2000 discuss a tool used to cut wood - each cut was smooth and precise.
Metromelt (Score:2)
Wow, I am enlightened (Score:4, Funny)
Concrete Zamboni (Score:5, Interesting)
Ah, the memories... (Score:3, Funny)
At one point I had a very large system of trenches about a half foot deep dug through the flowers that went on for quite a distance.
Needless to say, the local authorities (mom) weren't thrilled with this "science." They all said I was mad. They called me crazy. er...
Re:Ah, the memories... (Score:2)
gain robots, lose jobs? for skilled labor too? (Score:3, Insightful)
Slashdotted version of article is inaccurate (Score:2, Insightful)
"One hydrodemolition robot does the work of 15 jackhammers." "Requires only about two workers to supervise it instead of 15 jackhammer workers."
Specifically, since the robot can do the work of 15 jackhammers, you don't need those 15 jackhammer workers operating the 15 jackhammers (i.e., one worker per jackhammer), and can instead rely on the (about) two robot supervisors.
The statement on slashdot: "This kind
Finally! (Score:4, Funny)
At last a Civil Article! (Score:4, Interesting)
Hmm... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Wait a second. (Score:2)
Since it's Georgia (Score:2)
(Sorry - I'm from Georgia and live there and have never gotten the whole NASCAR thing
Maybe I'm missing something (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean, it still takes to people to operate it, so it's by no means autonomous.
As0k
Self improvement is masturbation... therefore masturbation is self improvement...*zip*
Re:Maybe I'm missing something (Score:2)
There are several answers to that, which largely depend on your definition of robot, so take your pick.
The first answer is that there is no difference between a robot [reference.com] (American Heritage, definition #2) and a complicated tool.
The second, more complete answer is that a robot (WordNet definition from above link) is just an automatic mechanism. If you go to the AquaJet site [aquajet.se] (They're the hydrodemolitions company in question.) an
Re:Maybe I'm missing something (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Maybe I'm missing something (Score:2)
A big fscking tool is something Ron Jeremy uses to do work.
HTH.
"A Robot that Destroys Everything in its Path" (Score:2)
Re:"A Robot that Destroys Everything in its Path" (Score:2)
Ah, my friend...
Surely you meant to say "DEMOLISHES!"
A robot that demolishes everything in its path!
WaterArmor(tm) (Score:2)
Spam Method (Score:2)
Re:Slashdotted...karma free text (Score:3, Funny)
Re:40 to 60 gallons/minute (Score:5, Funny)
but at least the fire would be out.
Re:40 to 60 gallons/minute (Score:2)
Re:40 to 60 gallons/minute (Score:2)
You won't find this [intnlind.com] at Walmart.
Re:Fresh water is scarce (Score:2)