A simple definition of a
pothole:
“Any pavement defect involving the surface, or the surface
and base, to the extent that it will cause significant noticeable impact on
vehicle tires and vehicle handling.”
Asphalt is brittle in cold temperatures. When spring thaws
saturate the soil that supports the asphalt, the pavement becomes vulnerable to
cracking and breaking as heavy traffic passes over. The more severe the winter
weather, the more likely it is there will be a pothole problem. The freeze-thaw
cycle can be a very significant winter event associated with potholes.
The eastern United
States experienced two severe winters,
1976-77 and 1977-78. The winter of 76-77 was bitterly cold and the winter of
77-78 was warmer and experienced record snowfalls. One of the most prominent
and hazardous results of the winter of 77-78 over the winter of 76-77 was the
large number of potholes in the roadways. This was associated with the large
number of freeze – thaw cycles experienced during the wetter/warmer winter. A
freeze – thaw cycle is defined as when the air temperature crosses 32° F and
then returns to the original side.
Lake Mills’ winter of 2012-13 is regularly experiencing a
freeze – thaw cycle. The conditions for potholes are prime. The advantage of
all these freeze – thaw cycles is that it reduces the possibility of flooding
this spring, but on the other hand, many of the roadways are going to need
significant work.
Four causes of potholes:
1.
Roads that have
insufficient thickness to support traffic during winter/spring thaw cycles
without localized failures.
2.
Poor drainage,
which will usually cause failure in combination with thin pavements, but can
also affect thick pavements and new overlays.
3.
Failures at
utility trenches and castings.
4.
Miscellaneous
paving defects and cracks left unmaintained or unsealed from water intrusion.
Drainage
Poor
drainage is a major contributor to pothole problems. Standing water and
subsurface water weaken pavement support and contribute to heaves and cracking
from frost penetration and freeze-thaw cycles. This year the large quantity of
snow we received also prevented the gutters from being kept open. The
maintenance of drainage features offers the greatest return for most
municipalities in the spending of annual funds for maintenance of roads with
regard to potholes.
In Lake Mills, our standard pavement specification is a
minimum of six (6) inches of three (3) inch graded crushed limestone below the
usual three (3) inches of ¾ inch crushed limestone base course prevents the
capillary action of drawing groundwater toward the colder surface (similar to
humidity condensing on a cold window).
Preventive
Maintenance Programs and Pavement Inventories
A policy of only repairing potholes and blocked drains is
not a maintenance program. Detecting early signs of roadway failure and taking
prompt preventive maintenance action (crack filling and chip seal-coating)
before potholes form can result in less expensive, more effective road
maintenance. Using well-trained crews and limited funds to best advantage
requires an expert inspector or engineering aide. Such experts are expensive,
but their skill in identifying areas in need of attention will more than pay
for them. Comprehensive inventorying of all roads in a local system by pavement
type, thickness, and condition of roadway allows street departments to
coordinate and prioritize maintenance efforts for maximum economy and effect.
Utility Cut Control
This report is probably high for Lake Mills ,
but we have our problems. Trenches and structures installed before or after the
pavement will behave differently because the subgrade portion of the pavement
system has been disturbed to a much greater depth than the surrounding
pavement.
Intersections,
Utility Castings, and Other Common Problem Areas
Repairing Potholes
The method that the City uses most often is "place and
roll’ or "quick response" pothole patching. This method usually
utilizes a two-man patch crew in a small dump truck assigned to repair potholes
in specific areas in the city. The areas are assigned on the basis of traffic
volume. Unlike quality patching, this type of repair is not intended to repair
fatigued sections of pavement. Place and roll patching addresses an immediate
need for filling potholes in the road with asphalt mix and making the road safe
for the traveling public. City pothole patching crews can usually fix the
majority of potholes before complaints are registered. We will attempt to fill
the hole within 24 hours of notification at the Street Department and the
weather allows. This type of response is needed to mitigate immediate risk to
vehicles traveling on a city-paved road. Without this type of response,
frequent vehicular damage from driving through potholes could occur.
Repair of potholes by place and roll patching is
accomplished by:
1. Cleaning the hole with a broom (if needed).
2. Shoveling a pavement repair material into the pothole to the
correct depth.
3. Raking the material smooth unless a self leveling material is
used.
4. Compacting the asphalt mix by rolling the patch with the tires of
the patch truck, using a vibratory plate compactor, or (with very small holes)
using a hand compaction device.
Work
zones for this type of work are categorized as "moving" work zones.
Traffic lane closures are not needed.
This
type of pothole patch repair can last from a low of one day up through several
years. How long the patch will last depends upon the quality of the material
used and the environment that the patching material is placed in. Water
infiltration into any asphalt patch material will greatly decrease the life of
the patch. The life of a patch repair will frequently be short when the
material is placed in potholes on severely deteriorated roads in wet weather
conditions.
"Quality
patching" is used to repair larger damaged or fatigued areas of asphalt
pavement. The damaged pavement section can include: multiple potholes,
"alligator" or "block" cracking, pavement raveling,
pavement rutting, or pavement shoving. Quality patching is usually utilized to
repair a road section larger than a single pothole.
A
four-man crew or larger is usually used to perform quality patch repairs depending
on equipment and traffic. Equipment frequently utilized to perform this
function includes: backhoe, pavement cutter or pavement grinder, dump truck to
haul excavated material and to haul materials used for the repair (base gravel
and asphalt), a steel drum roller or plate compactor, and a utility truck and
trailer to transport the roller and needed work zone traffic control devices.
Quality patch repairs are accomplished by:
1. Diggers Hotline must be contacted three days before any work is
started.
2. Square out and remove the area around pavement distress with
either a pavement cutter or pavement grinder.
3. Remove old asphalt pavement and, in some instances, the base
material.
4. Asphalt mix will be placed into the excavated repair area to a
depth that will be compacted level with the surrounding existing pavement
surface.
5. The asphalt mix will be raked smooth.
6. The asphalt mix will then be compacted to an acceptable density
with a plate compactor or small steel drum roller.
Because
of the equipment needed for the repair, traffic control devices for work zone
safety, in accordance with the Manual for Uniform Traffic Control Devices
(MUTCD), must be in place before quality patch work is started. Traffic lane
closures are almost always needed for quality patching. This, in turn, mandates
traffic channelization or the establishment of detour routes. Flaggers may be
needed in high traffic volume areas.
Pavement
repair accomplished by this method will always last longer than a "place
and roll" patch. When conducted on hot mix roads with a majority of the
road asphalt surface in good shape, quality patch repairs are generally
preferable to place and roll patching.
Any
repair patch or street cut in a paved road surface is considered by definition
to be pavement distress. A quality patch performed using proper construction
methods and under the best conditions does not restore the asphalt pavement to
its original structural integrity. At best, a quality patch will downgrade a
high severity distress condition to a low severity pavement distress. On roads
with marginal asphalt mat surfaces or with base problems, the process of
quality patching can actually damage the asphalt surface outside of the patch
area. When this happens, the quality patch will be good, but the asphalt
surface surrounding the patch will disintegrate. Road damage can, in effect,
spread from the repaired area.
Quality
patch pavement repairs require utilization of a significantly larger crew than
what is needed for "place and roll" pothole patching. Response time
for this type of repair will be much slower than a "place and roll"
patch. More manpower and equipment resources are needed to conduct the work. A
quality patch repair of a distressed road section will take much longer to
complete than a "place and roll" pothole patch. A repair that might
take five minutes for a "place and roll" response repair might take
an hour or longer to fix as a quality patch. The quality patch usually is
requires hot mix asphalt which is not available in Wisconsin until mid to late May.
Have there been any studies that detail whether lawn & garden chemicals affect asphalt? I was just wondering because I want to do everything I can to ensure the street by my house has as few potholes as possible :) I will refrain from repairing any pot holes myself as I'm sure even though you just taught me how, you'd rather have City approved materials added to your streets.
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