How do tunnelling machines know where they are?

There's no horizon to get your bearings when you're going deeper underground.


Asked by: Nigel Wight, Exeter

To keep 1,000-tonne, 150m long Tunnel Boring Machines (TBMs) like those used for London’s Crossrail project on track, engineers rely on a laser-based system. Precise reference points are set up below ground behind the TBM, and laser beams are sent out from them into receivers in the machine. This keeps the TBMs heading in the right direction to within a millimetre or so over distances of up to 100 metres.

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