Large DTH (Down-The-Hole) hammer drilling represents a critical component of modern deep foundation engineering, particularly for projects requiring substantial borehole diameters and high-capacity load-bearing solutions. This specialized work type encompasses the drilling and excavation of large-diameter boreholes utilizing percussion-based DTH technology, which delivers impact energy directly at the drill bit face through a downhole hammer mechanism. Large DTH hammers are specifically engineered to penetrate dense soil strata, weathered rock, and competent bedrock formations at significant depths, making them indispensable for bored pile construction, caisson drilling, and ground stabilization projects. The technique is particularly valuable in urban environments and congested construction sites where pile-driving noise and vibration must be minimized while maintaining drilling precision and operational efficiency. These hammers operate by converting hydraulic pressure and pneumatic energy into rapid percussion strikes that fracture and disintegrate subsurface materials, which are then removed via continuous circulation of drilling fluid or compressed air, depending on ground conditions and project requirements. The applications of large DTH hammer drilling extend across multiple foundation engineering disciplines, including the creation of deep shaft foundations, large-diameter bored piles ranging from 1.5 to 4 meters or greater in diameter, and diaphragm wall construction for basement and underground structure support. This drilling methodology is essential in projects requiring deep foundations that extend well below the active zone of surface disturbance or to depths where conventional surface casing and kelly-bar systems prove inefficient. The equipment performs exceptionally well in challenging geological conditions such as dense gravels, cobbles, cemented layers, fractured rock, and mixed face excavation environments where traditional auger drilling or rotary systems encounter production limitations. Large DTH hammers can achieve drilling speeds of 2 to 6 meters per hour depending on rock competency, formation hardness, and hammer specification, providing cost-effective drilling solutions that reduce overall foundation construction timelines. Operators and contractors deploying large DTH hammers must carefully assess ground conditions through pre-drilling site investigation, geological assessment, and geotechnical analysis to determine appropriate hammer sizing, bit selection, drilling fluid specifications, and circulation rates. Borehole stability and drilling fluid management are paramount considerations in large-diameter DTH applications, particularly in weak soils or unstable ground conditions where proper support systems—such as weighted bentonite slurry or temporary casing—are essential to prevent borehole collapse and maintain verticality. The technology integrates seamlessly with down-hole monitoring tools, piezometer installation, and quality assurance protocols that verify borehole integrity before pile cage placement and concrete tremie operations. Large DTH hammer drilling equipment ranges from mobile drill rigs mounted on truck chassis to crawler-based systems capable of operating on confined sites with limited headroom, ensuring adaptability to diverse project environments and logistical constraints throughout the foundation construction phase.
No equipment found in this category
No models found