Abstract

An impact study on a long-span continuous highway steel girder bridge is described. Crawl and full-speed test data were analyzed to examine the influence of bridge approach, surface condition, and truck velocity on impact factors for fatigue-prone details in both main and secondary bridge members. The measured impact factors for fatigue stress categories A, B, E, and E’ details were compared with values obtained using the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) Standard Specifications formula. For fatigue-prone details, the test results showed that surface roughness, truck velocity, and bridge approach affect the impact factor. Measured impact factors varied with the location of the detail. Also, the study showed that the AASHTO design impact factors were unconservative for details located in the bridge approach or end span.

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