Roto Witch or more commonly known as the poke and hope.

 

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris Fabien
Sent: Wednesday, April 06, 2016 10:03 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Trenching, drilling, plowing

 

Adam, there is two types of machines and methods being discussed here. 

 

The 410SX and many other small plows can be outfitted with what they call 
"RotoWitch" which is a compaction boring attachment. This is basically a long 
floppy drill bit that can be used to bore under short obstacles like a sidewalk 
or driveway. It is not steerable or locatable, you just cut a trench, lay the 
bit down in the trench, try to point it in the right direction an hope it comes 
out where you want.  Our maxi sneaker has this setup and we use it occasionally 
for sidewalks and single-car driveways. We've had trouble on 2-car or wider 
driveways with it getting off track. We've poked through someones asphalt drive 
with it once, and had to dig almost 5 feet deep to find it on the other side 
once. 

 

The other method is Horizontal Directional Drilling, which is a much much more 
expensive and involved process. This is the steerable, locatable process you'd 
typically use for boring under a road or for going longer distances. 

 

The discussion about whether you should drill or plow a certain stretch is 
subjective. Remember that every time you plow and need to go under an obstacle 
you have to figure 8 the whole cable run, or cut and have a splice point there. 
That can be a lot of labor if you're trying to keep a long run intact. 
Personally,  when we are running in a rural area, if we have driveways every 
200-400ft we drill that area. If we can go 800ft or more without obstructions 
then we plow that. 

 

Chris

 

 

On Wed, Apr 6, 2016 at 9:37 AM, Adam Moffett <[email protected]> wrote:

I was eyeballing a Ditch Witch 410sx because it seems to be an all-in-one kind 
of deal where you can use one machine for horizontal drilling, trenching, and 
plowing.

The instructions for horizontal drilling talk about digging a launch pit at 
least 20' long.  My concern there was that when we're drilling under a road, 
we'd be digging this launch pit way outside the ROW.  I'd worry about a 
landowner stopping a project because they don't want us to mess up their grass 
(we have people like that around here).

Is there a different machine I should be looking at for going under roads and 
driveways?

 

  _____  

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