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2,500-year-old blacksmith technique brings China’s mammoth machine to life: engineers

An ancient sword-making technique has helped Chinese engineers solve a major challenge to build the world’s largest tunnel boring machine

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The Sword of Goujian has provided the inspiration for Chinese engineers to solve a major challenge in building the world’s largest tunnel boring machine. Photo: Handout
Dannie Pengin Beijing

An ancient technique, famously used 2,500 years ago to make a sword for a legendary Chinese king, has now been used for a tunnel boring machine known as the “king of construction machinery”.

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While trying to create the world’s largest piece of equipment for tunnel construction, scientists and engineers on the project had to overcome one major hurdle: no country had ever been able to create steel strong enough for the massive machine.
The tunnel boring machine (TBM) has a main bearing with a diameter of 8.61 metres (28 feet) – as tall as a three-storey building. This bearing drives the giant machine that weighs over 10,000 tonnes – about as heavy as the Eiffel Tower.

All this load is borne by the surface layer of the bearing which is less than 1cm (0.4 inch) thick.

The main problem with manufacturing a bearing of that size is that the temperatures of the different areas change at different speeds during the process, and this lack of uniformity can make the steel weak.
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