Materials Man

Tag: pavement design economic appraisal

Pavement Design 2

by Ian on Nov.07, 2009, under Materials and Construction

I did deliver my pavement design talk to my senior colleagues on two separate occasions this week. Fortunately my stumbling performance was politely received, my highland hosts have an imbued politeness, which contrasts with my part weggie assertiveness. (Pure dead aggression, bye the way, know what I mean?)

To the talk, my spreadsheet brings together everything I put in text, and highlights, “where’s the money”. I have set it at 80 MSA  as that would appear to be the “design” standard adopted by Transport Scotland for most trunk roads. Perhaps so, if you have the money, order the best you can.

As I mentioned before class 4 designs are far too expensive, this cost comes from the foundation, the class 4 pavement is the cheapest as it is the thinnest. So I’m not sure where the highways agency thinks a class 4 foundation will be used, perhaps I need to run a few more designs with different foundation CBRs.  All blacktop surfaced foundations are more expensive than hydraulically bound materials at 80 MSA. this should worry the blacktop boys as even the very good EME2 material does not feature as a base. I also believe I can reduce my HBM prices as I have induced cracks in  HBM foundations when I now believe I was being conservative.

Other features that emerged were discussions on what needs cracked, it seems clear that mixes with 10 N/mm2 at 7 days, laid widths more than 4.75m and all HBM bases with a blacktop surface, need induced cracking. the other item was laying tolerances, it is clear that series 700 is not up to speed with the new requirements. No negative tolerances are a particular problem and need careful thought and discussion at tender time and when subsequently placing a sub-contract. Do both pre-tender?

A adjunct to pavement design was raised by me, Transport Scotland have road compliance testing at years 3, 4 and 5, this includes the deflectograph. If this shows potential defects, then investigation follows. If your pavement suffers from debonding, it probably will show as a potential defect. It is vital therefore, to “prove” your design was built to the DMRB, to record your bond coat applications, with all the attendant spraybar and product certificates. This will be necessary till a bond test is introduced. Also have the lab that cores the pavement from the upper layers to record and photograph the whole core before any splitting is performed.

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Pavement Design

by Ian on Sep.15, 2009, under Materials and Construction

I did a talk to our graduates recently on pavement design with a construction director, I did the technical bit he did the money / risks bit. Directors don’t get to be directors in a LTD company without merit. For those of you mentally compiling a list of  directors without merit,  just ask yourself if they were good for the company, ie made money? So there are certain learning opportunities watching a director who has had training and experience that I will never have. It was a complete focus on “where’s the money?” ” and how can you lose it?” A money risk workshop.

Although I am never oblivious to money, it  can be a blinkered vision when you  concentrate on the technical bit, consultant pavement designers take heed!! for what I am about to reveal may sound counter intuitive.

So when instructed to do a similar talk to senior staff I decided to take it all of it on board myself, and what I have completed (but not yet delivered) was an introduction to the design principals followed by a lengthy exercise on IAN 73 and HD 26.

Now the exercise I speak of is a spreadsheet where teams will fill in the thicknesses from the design charts in IAN 73 and HD 26 for a MSA of 80, for various CBR formations,  and discussion will follow. I have Scottish market prices on the spreadsheet. This reveals certain outputs:

performance designs are more economical than restricted.

HBM bases are more economical than blacktop bases.

The cost of the whole foundation plus pavement has various drivers, but the foundation costs predominate, despite them being around a fifth of the whole pavement + foundation cost.

This means  the choice of pavement , ie cheapest with risk analysis applied, should mean that HBM  and performance design will predominate and class 3 and class 4 foundations are far too expensive.

This has singular outcomes particularly if oil/bitumen prices soar, which does affect HBMs cost, but not to the same extent as blacktop.

I did ask HA if a economical appraisal had been conducted and the answer  was no, but I have read that IAN 73 and HA 26/06 have been subject to an economical appraisal.

Well if my spreadsheet is correct then there are two (50% of the available performance designs) that will never be used !!

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