The RoadReady® Diamond Suite contains 10 courses, created specifically for Operators. Each course represents training that is necessary to achieve high quality pavments safely, leading to increased profitability.
Constructing a porous asphalt pavement is no more challenging than constructing a dense graded pavement, but is different in that more attention must be paid to keeping the air voids open. Some tips for the field:
First, excavating must be done with tracked or lightly loaded equipment in order to prevent subgrade compaction.
Geotextiles must go down immediately after fine grading of the subgrade.
Single-sized base aggregate must be clean and washed, and only lightly compacted – don’t use vibration!
A choker course is recommended, as it will provide a more stable base for paving.
After these crucial steps, paving can be done much as usual, but consider a tracked paver and make sure to keep equipment off the aggregate base as much as possible.
Open graded, washed aggregate base with keys for scale
To learn more about construction or techniques for designing your mix, check out:
The Smoothness Playbook was the topic in the most recent RoadReady newsletter. An additional best practice add to the Smoothness Playbook is to maintain the proper head of material behind the screed. Here is a slide from our Paver Operations course to help illustrate the impacts of not maintaining proper head of material.
In addition to our Paver Operations course, we would recommend that you check out the following resources for more information on smoothness:
Smoothness Matters is a publication put out by the Asphalt Pavement Alliance and looks in depth at the correlation between smooth roads and decreased vehicle fuel consumption.
Let us know if you have any additional resources on smoothness as we’d love to include them here on our blog!
Constructing high quality longitudinal joints was the topic in the most recent RoadReady newsletter . One of the critical steps to constructing a quality joint is compacting the joint properly. Below is an animation illustrating proper placement of the roller.
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BEST PRACTICE: Rolling from the hot side 6 inches (150 mm) away from the joint. The first roller pass is done in vibratory mode with the entire roller wheel on the hot lane about 6 inches (150 mm) from the joint. This compaction technique pushes the material between the roller and joint towards the joint during the initial roller pass, which crowds the mix at the joint yielding a an opportunity to achieve better density during the 2nd pass when the roller compacts the joint directly.
Rolling from the hot side. NOT RECOMMENDED. The first roller pass occurs in vibratory mode with the majority of the roller wheel on the hot lane and overlapped onto the cold lane by about 6 inches (150 mm). Because part of the weight of the roller is supported by the previously compacted cold lane, it can cause a situation where the roller “bridges” over the joint or leaves it only partially compacted.
Rolling from the cold side. NOT RECOMMENDED. The first roller pass occurs in the static mode with the majority of the roller wheel on the cold lane and overlapped onto the hot lane by about 6 inches (150 mm). This technique is believed to pinch the joint together. The reason this is not a recommended technique is because the timing in this type of rolling is critical. When the roller is operated on the cold side of the joint, the hot side undergoes cooling which makes it difficult to achieve the desired compaction level before the hot side reaches cessation temperature.
Here are some additional resources if you want to learn more about longitudinal joint construction, performance data and best practice:
We mentioned that we don’t recommend using handwork unless you have well trained and experienced crews. Here are some resources to help get your crews the knowledge they need: the Pavement Interactive HMA Placement Considerations article and our Paving Handwork course.
Are you applying tack coat properly? As we learned in our newsletter on tack coats, the height of the spray bar and nozzle spray patterns have a significant effect on tack coat coverage. Click on the interaction below to see how various combinations of spray bar height and nozzle pressure produce different coverage patterns.
Flash interactive showing tack spray bar rates
Want to learn more about tack coats, application rates, laydown timing, specs? Check out the following resources:
A Pavement Interactive article on Tack Coats that describes the basic aspects and application considerations. It also contains additional resources describing emulsions to help you understand how tack works.
Summary results from a Tack Coat Survey of all 50 states that shows how the state DOT’s use tack coat in their specifications.
Got other tack resources or links to share? Please let us know and we’ll add it to the list above.
In our most recent newsletter, we talked about Milling as a technique to level existing surfaces prior to paving. Below is an animation from our Construction course that shows the parts and processes of a typical milling machine. This course also provides an overview of all the construction activities associated with asphalt mix paving including also asphalt mix production, transport, placement, and compaction.
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There is also a great article we’d reccomend looking at in Pavement Interactive, Existing Surface Preparation for Overlays, that covers all the common ways to prepare existing pavements for overlays. (Notice the familar milling animation? It’s from our Construction course!)
Building roads and highways can be dangerous work. Dangers in the work zone come from many sources, but we focused on Blind Spots in our most recent newsletter and wanted to provide more information as well as a preview from our newly updated Work Zone Safety course.
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We’ve also found these two websites extremely helpful for aggregating information like policy, best practice and additional resources:
WorkZoneSafety.org – clearinghouse for tools, resources and status related to Work Zone Safety and they do just that! This is a great place to get answers (or at the very least, the direction where to get answers) to any of your questions about work zone safety.
FHWA Work Zone Safety Site- dedicated to Work Zone Safety, this FHWA site presents some staggering facts about the complexities around Work Zones as well a wealth of other information like best practices or updates from different agencies and states about what they are doing to make work zones safer.
As we mentioned earlier, Pavia Systems offers an online course on Work Zone Safety that takes folks through common work zone hazards, how to avoid them, other work zone safety practices and traffic control in the work zone.
There are several considerations and best practices when transporting asphalt pavement mixes that we discussed about in our most recent RoadReady newsletter, but we also wanted to provide some additional resources on our blog.
Here’s an animation from our End Dump Truck Exchange course that highlights how to properly back into the paver:
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There are two articles on Pavement Interactive on transporting asphalt mix that we think provide great supplemental information:
HMA Temperature Differentials were the topic of our most recent newsletter and we’ve heard feedback from some of you that you like to see additional resources listed here on our blog. For anyone interested in learning more about temperature differentials, segregation and how to manage the impacts, check out the following:
The HMA industry is doing some great things in the area of sustainability. We’ve sent a couple of newsletters on the topic , available here, and wanted to include a list of resources as well as introduce our newest introductory course on Sustainability.
For those of you working towards minimizing Aggregate Segregation, we’ve put together a list of useful resources that will assist you in your quest. The following materials represent resources from Pavement Interactive and Pavia Systems.
This course provides an overview of best practices and safety procedures associated with the loading, transport and dumping of hot mix asphalt using an end dump truck. An example lesson, on the proper loading techniques for Multiple Drop Loading is embedded below.
Designed to familiarize technicians and engineers with the origins, procedures, calculations, and results associated with common aggregate tests, this bundle is comprehensive in its coverage in all things related to determining aggregate quality.