thumb|Video of construction workers ramming a road surface

A tamper is a device used to compact or flatten an aggregate or another powdered or granular material, typically to make it resistant to further compression or simply to increase its density.

Examples

  • Small, handheld tampers are used to compress ground coffee into a puck to prepare espresso.

thumb|A fancy coffee tamper

  • Manual or powered tampers compact gravel before laying a concrete or brick patio or walkway so that the underlying gravel layer does not settle over time, or compress the fill in a utility trench as seen in the illustration.
  • Self-propelled, mechanised ballast tamping machines, which compact the ballast underneath rail tracks.
  • Preparing some firearms and artillery pieces for firing may involve tamping the charge, such as explosive material or a projectile, into the barrel. For example, muzzle loaders.
  • A fireplace can be tamped with a poker or similar tool to compress the material being burned (wood, coal, peat etc...). This improves the heat/burning efficiency, by reducing the volume of burning material that is exposed to airflow. This is often confused with damping - which involves reducing the intensity of the burn by restricting the flue or by the use of any fire retarding material such as water.

Tampers in construction

Within the construction field, different types of tampers can be used for different purposes, spaces, and materials.

  • A jumping jack, or rammer, is a relatively small, hand-operated compactor. It uses vibratory force, which is when mechanical force is used in addition to the machine's weight to compact the materials. The jumping jack is composed of a motor, handle, and head. When the motor is started, the head is moved up and down, and the operator steers the machine around the desired area. Jumping jacks work well in small areas and are good for cohesive soil, or soil with a large clay content. The video shows a jumping jack being used in construction to prepare for paving.
  • A plate compactor, or plate tamp, is another hand-operated compactor that also uses vibratory force. The plate is placed on the material the operator wishes to compact and pressed down. Handheld tampers are best used with soil and other small-scale projects due to the lack of great force from mechanical elements.

See also

  • Compactor
  • Sand rammer

References