A study was conducted to assess the relative performance of different flexible pavement maintenance treatments, including the influence of pretreatment condition and other factors. The data used in the study were drawn from the Long-Term Pavement Performance Studies' Specific Pavement Studies (SPS) SPS-3 experiment. The maintenance treatments used in the SPS-3 experiment are thin overlays, slurry seals, crack seals, and chip seals. The initial and long-term effects of the maintenance treatments on international roughness index (IRI), rutting, and cracking were analyzed, as were the influences of time, truck traffic, pretreatment condition, and climate. Thin overlays were found to be the most effective of the treatments studied, followed by chip seals and slurry seals. Crack sealing did not demonstrate any beneficial initial or long-term effect with respect to IRI, rutting, or cracking.
The results of a study conducted to assess the relative performance of different flexible pavement rehabilitation treatments, including the influence of pretreatment condition and other factors, are presented. The data used in the study were drawn from the Long-Term Pavement Performance Studies' Specific Pavement Study (SPS) SPS-5 and General Pavement Study (GPS) GPS-6B experiments. The rehabilitation treatments used in the SPS-5 experiment are 2- and 5-in. overlays with virgin or recycled asphalt concrete mixes with or without preoverlay milling. Overlay thickness and preoverlay roughness levels were the two factors that most influenced the performance of the asphalt overlays of asphalt pavements in the SPS-5 experiment with respect to roughness, rutting, and fatigue cracking. Over the long term, the 5-in. overlays outperformed the 2-in. overlays with respect to roughness, rutting, and fatigue cracking. Overlay mix type (virgin versus recycled) and preoverlay preparation (with or without milling) had slight and inconsistent effects. The average initial postoverlay international roughness index of an asphalt overlay of an asphalt pavement was found to be 0.98 m/km. The data show a slight but statistically significant tendency for asphalt pavements overlaid when they were rougher to have more initial roughness after overlay than asphalt pavements overlaid when they were smoother. The data show that, on average, about 6 mm of rutting develops in the first year or so after placement of an asphalt overlay of an asphalt pavement. This is presumably due to compaction of the mix by traffic and appears to be independent of the overlay thickness, mix type, preoverlay preparation, and preoverlay rutting level.
The results of a study conducted to assess the relative performance of different jointed rigid pavement rehabilitation treatments, including the influence of pretreatment condition and other factors, are presented. The data used in the study were drawn from the Long-Term Pavement Performance Studies' Specific Pavement Study (SPS) SPS-6 and General Pavement Study (GPS) GPS-7B experiments. The rehabilitation treatments used in the SPS-6 experiment were minimal and intensive nonoverlay repair, 4-in. asphalt overlays with minimal and intensive preoverlay preparation, 4-in. overlays with sawed and sealed joints, and 4- and 8-in. asphalt overlays of cracked and seated concrete slabs. Overall, the rigid pavement rehabilitation treatments in the SPS-6 experiment could be ranked from most to least effective in the following order: 8-in. overlay of cracked or broken and seated pavement, 4-in. overlay (of either intact or cracked or broken and seated pavement, with or without sawing and sealing of joints and with either minimal or intensive preoverlay repair), concrete pavement restoration with diamond grinding, and concrete pavement restoration without diamond grinding. Concrete pavement restoration with diamond grinding yielded an initial posttreatment international roughness index (IRI) of 1.05 m/km, on average, whereas restoration without diamond grinding yielded no benefit in IRI and in fact tended to leave the pavement rougher than before. In the long term, both restoration and overlay treatments reduced long-term roughness, rutting, and cracking levels compared with those on the control sections, but the conditions of the restored test sections are approaching those of the control sections faster than those of the overlay sections.
This paper aims to show the results and comparison obtained from blasting using overdrilled blastholes and blasting using a bottom of the blasthole located air-deck. The effect of using a blasthole air-deck, on medium to low hardness rock found in the western area of the Escondida pit, helped maintain the required grade level even after loading with heavy equipment. Additional benefits include satisfactory fragmentation of the blasted material.
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