Abstract

One of the requirements concerning pavement quality is the evenness of its surface. Pavement unevenness has a random character and has an adverse influence to rolling resistance, tyre–pavement coherence, safety and the driving comfort. Knowledge of “longitudinal unevenness” has been long recognized as an important criteria of road performance, not only for safety by causing vehicle vibrations and affecting ride comfort but also as a major factor in pavement deterioration and working conditions of vehicles. The paper presents two original devices for the measurement of pavement longitudinal unevenness designed as a reaction to results and experiences gathered from a few years’ research activities, measurements and evaluations of road pavement evenness carried out in the authors' work place (University of Žilina – UNIZA). The first equipment has been designed as a single-wheel trailing vehicle and has been constructed on the Double-mass Measuring Set (DMS) principle and it is referred to as UNIZA single-wheel vehicle JP VSDS. The main reason for designing the device were authors’ findings that the reference quarter car model (used for calculation of International Roughness Index – IRI) can provide evaluation, which can be in contradiction with ride safety. This fact is determined by overvaluation of the short wavelengths and undervaluation the longer wavelengths by reference model. The second one is a profiler with very high resolution of surface scanning using mathematical models for unevenness evaluation. The device is referred to as Dynamic Road Scanner (DRS). The reason for designing of this equipment was in the first place insufficient repeatability of transversal unevenness measurements of device used by Slovak Road Administration, but for the purpose of correctness and measurements accuracy verifying were also results of longitudinal unevenness measurements compared. The paper presents results of evaluation by international established dynamic quantifiers of longitudinal unevenness based on measurements performed by these devices on three selected road sections in Slovakia. In the next part of the paper are compared IRI values obtained by mathematical calculations using reference quarter car model “driving” on road section profile measured by geodetic survey with IRI values obtained by conversion of the unevenness degree C (measured by UNIZA single-wheel vehicle JP VSDS) and IRI values measured by profilometer DRS.

Highlights

  • Kropáč and Múčka (2009) presented, that the need for a suitable method for characterisation of road unevenness was recognised by the beginning of the twentieth century with the rapid development of motorised road transport

  • The first equipment has been designed as a single-wheel trailing vehicle and has been constructed on the Double-mass Measuring Set (DMS) principle and it is referred to as UNIZA single-wheel vehicle JP VSDS

  • In the part of the paper are compared IRI values obtained by mathematical calculations using reference quarter car model “driving” on road section profile measured by geodetic survey with IRI values obtained by conversion of the unevenness degree C and IRI values measured by profilometer Dynamic Road Scanner (DRS)

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Summary

Introduction

Kropáč and Múčka (2009) presented, that the need for a suitable method for characterisation of road unevenness was recognised by the beginning of the twentieth century with the rapid development of motorised road transport. One-purpose devices gained popularity, which even at that time were based on the system view that it is important to consider some characteristic of the unevenness in conjunction with its effect on the travelling vehicle Devices of this type usually measured the response of a suitable mass to the unevenness excitation. The values of a real car model are two times more for speed 90 km/h and four times more for speed 130 km/h (Celko et al 2009), which is very inconvenient fact in term of ride safety and in term of subsequent PMS actions planning All these results encouraged authors for designing original devices for the measurement of pavement unevenness, with goal make evaluation more objective and with high rate of repeatability

Analytical description of pavement longitudinal unevenness
Dynamic quantification of longitudinal unevenness
UNIZA single-wheel vehicle – JP VSDS
Description of dynamic road scanner
Verification of longitudinal unevenness evaluation using designed devices
Conclusions
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