Mechanical retexturing of roads : an experiment to assess durability. Prepared for the Highways Agency, Pavement Engineering Group.

Author(s)
Roe, P.G. & Hartshorne, S.A.
Year
Abstract

This report is the second in a series describing the results of a project examining the effects of mechanical retexturing of road surfaces. It reports the work done to study the durability of four processes (scabbling, bush hammering, orthogonal flailed grooving and shot blasting) on a rolled asphalt surfacing. These were applied to both lanes of a length of dual carriageway trunk road in February 1994. The study compared the skidding resistance and texture depth of the retextured sections with untreated control sections at the time of treatment and, subsequently, through the summers of 1994, 1995 and 1996. It was found that all four processes improved skidding resistance compared to the control sections and some improvement was still in evidence at the end of the thirty-two month trial. The scabbling and bush-hammering reduced the texture depth. (A)

Publication

Library number
C 9735 [electronic version only] /23 /61 / IRRD 895807
Source

Crowthorne, Berkshire, Transport Research Laboratory TRL, 1998, IV + 13 p., 2 ref.; TRL Report ; No. 299 - ISSN 0968-4107

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.