The International Union of Running Engineers has plenty of big toys at its training center in Crosby, Texas, however one that started rolling across the 265- acre school recently is a quirk. The customized Caterpillar 336 excavator can use onboard computers and sensing units to perform by itself some of the work the center trains human operators to do, such as digging trenches for gas pipelines or wind turbine structures.
The IUOE’s brand-new robotic excavator is the result of an unusual collaboration with Built Robotics, a San Francisco startup that offers a box that can allow a backhoe or bulldozer to pilot itself for some tasks. It contains a high-powered computer system, motion and angle sensors, and a laser scanner called a lidar typically used in self-driving cars.
Although Developed’s item is created to get rid of workers from the cab of construction devices, IUOE’s director of building training, Chris Treml, says the union wishes to train its members to work with the innovation. “Running engineers are always on the cutting edge of innovation,” he states.
The IUOE was founded in 1896 and its logo includes a steam gauge with the needle