Official Blog of Pro-Tec Equipment

First 5-Bays installed

A new green corn receiving pit was recently completed at the Monsanto Site in Constantine, MI by James Ware Construction Inc of Sturgis, along with Morris Excavating of White Pigeon and Davis Contracting of Grand Rapids. The receiving pit was over 100′ in length, 14′ wide and started at 8′ deep and gradually went to 11′ deep by the end of the run.

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A 50,000-square foot Tendercare Health Center, which will be an adult assisted living center, is being construction on 6 acres off of Marsh Road in Meridian Township, MI.  The $12-million project began in October 207 and is scheduled for completion in June.

L.D. Clark Excavating Company’s scope of work included clearing and grubbing; excavating and filling 8 feet deep across the project site; placing 1,500 feet of water main with two roadway bore and jacks; placing 3,000 feet of storm sewer and 670 feet of sanitary sewer by directional drill and open cut; site excavating and grading; parking lot construction and asphalt paving.

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Publication: Michigan Contractor and Builder
Date: Monday, February 2 2009
A concrete natural gas valve vault/junction chamber was installed at the southeast corner of South Lincoln and East Division in Rockford, MI, in November 2008. The pit size was 12 feet wide by 16 feet long by 12 feet deep. Kent Power, of Kent City, MI, was the prime contractor for the project.
Pro-Tec Equipment provided its Slide Rail Shoring System. Three 12-foot panels instead of the standard 8-foot and 4-foot panels were used for the Slide Rail Shoring System, according to Thomas A. Marciniak, Pro-Tec Marketing/Sales representative.
“There were overhead wires nearby, and this pit was 12 feet from a major four-lane road. A traditional box couldn’t be used,” Marciniak said. The water was approximately 5 feet deep, and soft, sticky clay made the Slide Rail Shoring System difficult to remove.
Kent Power installed a regulation set in order to increase the pounds per square inch (psi) in the gas system from 10 psi to 60 psi. The vault is 8 feet by 8 feet by 15 feet.
“The existing vault was further to the west in the roadway and it had been there for a number of years. It was time to upgrade and install a newer vault out of the roadway so that it would be more accessible to DTE Energy crews,” Ernie Hileman, foreman for Kent Power, said. Hileman said that the new vault provides more room for DTE personnel to work.
Project: Installation of a concrete natural gas valve vault/junction chamber in Rockford, MI
Contractor: Kent Power, of Kent City, MI
Natural Gas Valve Vault Installed
By Aram Kalousdian
Publication: Michigan Contractor and Builder2008-11-20 KENT POWER ROCKFORD, MI 011
Date: Monday, February 2 2009
A concrete natural gas valve vault/junction chamber was installed at the southeast corner of South Lincoln and East Division in Rockford, MI, in November 2008. The pit size was 12 feet wide by 16 feet long by 12 feet deep. Kent Power, of Kent City, MI, was the prime contractor for the project.
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Installing a 20-foot-square cast-in-place concrete foundation for a pump station at the bottom of a 24-foot-deep excavation in metropolitan Indianapolis presented more than a few problems for Bowen Engineering Corp. of Fishers, Ind.

CAT 330 and 345 hydraulic excavators team up during installation of the PRO-TEC Slide Rail System. First and foremost was the location. The 30-foot-6-inch by 34-foot-6-inch-long and 24-foot-deep pit that was excavated to accommodate the poured concrete bed was sandwiched tightly between E. Westfield Avenue on the west side and a levee walling off the White River on the east with little operating room and no room at all to slope in any direction. Read the rest of this entry »

Associated Construction Publications


The Slide Rail System was an integral facet in the installation of the twin 900-foot-long, 84-inch-diameter water intake and outflow pipes.

For shear size and complexity, this was by far the biggest and most interesting trench shielding job I have ever been a part of, and I’ve been working with trench shield systems for over 25 years,” said Gary Carlson, president of Gary Carlson Equipment of Blaine, Minn., the PRO-TEC shielding and shoring distributor for the state of Minnesota.

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Background

The University of Michigan Hospital at Ann Arbor required a 300,000-gallon diesel fuel tank for emergency power generators to be installed on-site.

Problem

The tank had to be installed 24’ deep, requiring an excavation 64’ long x 17’ wide, with an existing 30” diameter underground water pipeline, paved road and property lines close by.  With all this had to be done in a “Quiet Zone” where the vibration caused by installing tight sheeting was not acceptable to hospital personnel performing life saving micro-surgical procedures. Read the rest of this entry »

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