An analysis of the experience of dredger operation in various industries allows us to identify the following main problems that need to be addressed to improve their efficiency: improvement of papillonation schemes and structural enhancement of the main equipment from a hydraulic perspective. The current soil intake devices, suction lines, and soil pumps do not always fully meet the specific requirements of soil development conditions. The objectives of the present research were to propose ways to enhance the performance of systems for automatic control of dredger work movements and automatic regulation of the soil intake process. These proposals aim to create a parabolic cross-sectional shape of the canal during development, ensure the highest productivity and lowest energy consumption, as well as low work costs, using modern control devices. The effect of the proposed technology for canal development using dredgers with automated papillonation consists of the following: providing the developed canals with a stable cross-sectional shape; automating the papillonation of the dredger and optimizing the operation of the soil pump; Implementing shift-based production accounting; using soil meters in the automated system. Giving the developed canal a cross-sectional shape that is stable in both hydraulic and static aspects has allowed for the following benefits: increased sediment transport capacity of the flow, while simultaneously reducing the cross-sectional area, growth of vegetation, water level fluctuations, water losses, and the right-of-way strip; reduced the volume of cleaning work by up to 20%; increased the period between cleanings by ensuring uniform flow movement; enhanced the productivity of dredgers by concentrating sediment on the canal slopes without changing the overall volume of cleaning.
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