The Value of Load Volume Scanners — Aggregates Quarries & Mines
Quarry and mine operations live on flow: what’s extracted, hauled, crushed, and shipped. The challenge isn’t moving rock, it’s knowing, fast and defensibly, how much you’re moving at every turn. A Load Volume Scanner (or Volumetric Load Scanner) captures a 3D profile of each truck and returns a verified volume within minutes of the pass, tied to vehicle and product via RFID/QR/LPR, creating a permanent audit trail you can trust. The result: you stop guessing, start optimizing, and margins improve without slowing the pit or the plant.
Many sites rely on contractors to haul blasted rock from the face to the Run-Of-Mine pad or primary crusher. Others accept cleanfill and spoil as part of rehabilitation and waste levy schemes. In both cases, accurate cubic measurement ensures fairness, compliance, and efficiency.
Business value
- Contract reconciliation: Pay contractors by verified m³ instead of rough trip counts.
- Production clarity: Track how much rock truly reaches the crusher, not just estimated tons.
- Cleanfill billing & compliance: Bill back by cubic metre and meet regulatory reporting with no disputes.
- Downtime tracking: Volumetric scans highlight delays in haulage and idle crusher time.
Revenue loss in quarries comes from two sources: over-give (too generous loading) and underfills (selling short). With target vs. actual feedback in near-real time, loader operators consistently hit capacity; every ticket carries a tamper-proof 3D record.
Business value
- Revenue integrity: Sell exactly what you intend, no hidden giveaways, no short loads.
- Customer trust: Visual, auditable proof of quantity reduces disputes and credit notes.
- Faster turns: Trucks confirm and clear quickly, keeping the cycle moving.
- Asset efficiency: Optimally loaded trucks mean fewer trips, less fuel, and lower emissions.
Sites that both move rock internally and ship product outbound get the compounding effect: measured internal haulage + precise outbound sales. Scanning returning empties can also detect haulback (material stuck in the bed), prompting liner changes or improved dump practices.
Business value
- One source of truth: From pit to crusher to customer, volumes line up.
- Operator coaching: Scatterplots of fill performance reveal coaching opportunities.
- Cleaner close: Inventory aligns with shipped product, not after-the-fact adjustments.
- Production reporting: Replace truck-count estimates with precise volumes for each product line.
- Stockpile management: Monitor real-time volumes and reassign crushers before shortages hit.
- Equipment utilization: Detect bottlenecks when crushers or trucks underperform.
- Safety & efficiency: Less stop-and-go at gates compared to weighbridge checks.
- Sustainability: Fewer trips = reduced diesel consumption and CO₂ per tonne delivered.
- Throughput: 200 trucks/day × 22 days = 4,400 loads/month
- Revenue protection (2%): 88,000 tons × $12/ton = $1,056,000 → ~$21,120/month safeguarded
- Ops efficiency: Save 2 minutes admin/handling per load → ~147 hours/month = $11,025 (@ $75/hr blended)
- Total benefit: ≈ $32,145/month
- Scanner cost: ~$15,000
- Payback: $15,000 ÷ $32,145 ≈ 0.47 months (~2 weeks)
Even if the benefits are halved (1% + 1 min), payback is still ~1 month — showing Load Scanner economics are highly compelling with an almost immediate ROI. And that’s before factoring in fraud prevention, stolen material detection, or other hidden losses that scanners can help uncover.
For Aggregates Quarries & Mines, a Load Volume Scanner transforms measurement from a best guess into a profit lever. You pay contractors fairly, reconcile cleanfill with regulators seamlessly, and sell outbound loads with confidence. With dependable results minutes after each pass and immediate ROI, the question isn’t “Can we afford a scanner?”, it’s how long can we afford to keep losing by not having one?
This is Part 1 of our series on the Business Value of Load Volume Scanners. Next up: Civil Construction.