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Tunnel Tragedy: Vertical boring done up to 31 metres
Rat-hole miners arrive for manual horizontal drilling
Uttarkashi: Vertical drilling from the top of the Silkyara tunnel, where 41 workers have been trapped for the last 15 days, progressed to 31 metres on Monday as a team of rat-hole miners arrived at the site to start manual drilling horizontally through the rubble.
Vertical and manual horizontal drillings are the two methods on which rescue efforts are being focused at the moment. Work on the other options, such as horizontal drilling from the Barkot end of the tunnel is also underway. A total of 86 metres have to be drilled vertically to prepare an escape passage. Pipes of 1.2 metres in diameter have to be laid vertically through the top of the tunnel on which work began on Sunday as a second option to reach the stranded labourers.
Lt Gen Harpal Singh (retd), former engineer-in-chief of the Army, informed reporters in Silkyara that vertical drilling has been done up to 31 metres. Singh, who has also headed the Border Roads Organisation, is involved in the rescue operation.
The 200-mm diameter pipes, which were inserted vertically earlier to learn about the soil strata and find out whether there are any obstacles on the way, have reached up to 70 metres, he said, adding preparations are also underway to start horizontal drilling inside the main tunnel manually.
“Frames of 800-mm diameter pipes have been prepared. We will move ahead by half a metre to one metre gradually. If all goes well and no obstacles are encountered a 10-metre stretch can be covered in 24-36 hours,” he said.
A six-member team of rat-hole miners also arrived at the site to start manual drilling which is a slow and difficult process in which they will go one after another through the 800-mm diametre pipes laid through the rubble and remove the debris with the help of shovels to insert more pipes.
When asked whether going through the 800-mm diameter pipes would be difficult for them, a team member said they have experience in manually clearing debris through even 600-mm diameter pipes.
The rat-hole miners will go inside the pipes wearing a helmet, a uniform, a mask and glasses. Though a time-consuming process, manual drilling seems a feasible option as only around 10-12 metres through the rubble remain to be drilled to complete the escape passage.
When asked which of these two options is likely to be completed first, Singh said it is difficult to predict as everything depends on whether or not any hurdle is encountered.
Manual drilling was resorted to as the auger drill -- a corkscrew-like device with a rotary blade at the front end -- which had drilled up to around 46.8 metres had to be withdrawn as it hit several hurdles on the way and finally got entangled in a girder in the debris.
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