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First level analysis report: comparative testing of HVS Mk IV+ and HVS Mk III on road D2388 near Cullinan

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dc.contributor.author Morton, B
dc.contributor.author Theyse, HL
dc.date.accessioned 2009-01-30T10:13:11Z
dc.date.available 2009-01-30T10:13:11Z
dc.date.issued 2003-03
dc.identifier.citation Morton, B and Theyse, HL. 2003. First level analysis report: comparative testing of HVS Mk IV+ and HVS Mk III on road D2388 near Cullinan. Contract Report, CR-2002/81, pp 73 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2951
dc.description.abstract After many years of owning and operating a Heavy Vehicle Simulator (HVS) Mk III, Gautrans acquired a HVS Mk IV+ in May 2002. In addition to the advanced features that this machine possesses in comparison to its predecessor, the HVS Mk IV+ also has certain operational advantages that will make it more efficient than the Mk III. The HVS Mk IV+ will be utilised in all future Accelerated Pavement Testing (APT) operations undertaken by Gautrans. The differences between the two machines could, however, result in variations in pavement response and test results. Based on this concern and in an effort to ensure uniformity throughout APT with the HVS, a comparative testing project was initiated to compare the effect of the two machines on pavement response. Differences in the pavement response induced by the HVS Mk III and HVS Mk IV+ may be caused by differences in the trafficking speed of the machines (loading frequency), differences in the total load applied by the machines and differences in the contact stresses applied by different tyre brands and tyre widths used on the two machines. An attempt was made to eliminate the effect of total load by developing total load calibration curves for the two HVSs prior to comparative testing. The procedure followed during the comparative testing was to identify two test sections for testing. These test sections were subjected to trafficking by each of the HVSs until elastic and plastic response trends could be established for both test sections. The machines were then swapped and trafficking continued until the new elastic and plastic pavement responses trends could confidently be compared to the original response trends. Small but consistent changes in the elastic deflection were observed when the machines where swapped but these changes were too small to influence the interpretation of the elastic response results under normal testing conditions. The changes in the permanent deformation response that were observed when the machines were swapped are of greater concern and could lead to different conclusions regarding the bearing capacity of the test pavement. It is, however, suspected that the observed differences in pavement response could be caused by differences in the applied total load and contact stresses at the operational trafficking speeds of the machines. Further work is recommended to investigate this. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher CSIR en
dc.subject Accelerated pavement testing en
dc.subject APT en
dc.subject Heavy vehicle simulator en
dc.subject HVS en
dc.subject HVS Mk IV+ en
dc.subject HVS Mk III en
dc.title First level analysis report: comparative testing of HVS Mk IV+ and HVS Mk III on road D2388 near Cullinan en
dc.type Report en
dc.identifier.apacitation Morton, B., & Theyse, H. (2003). <i>First level analysis report: comparative testing of HVS Mk IV+ and HVS Mk III on road D2388 near Cullinan</i> CSIR. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2951 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Morton, B, and HL Theyse <i>First level analysis report: comparative testing of HVS Mk IV+ and HVS Mk III on road D2388 near Cullinan.</i> CSIR, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2951 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Morton B, Theyse H. First level analysis report: comparative testing of HVS Mk IV+ and HVS Mk III on road D2388 near Cullinan. 2003 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2951 en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Report AU - Morton, B AU - Theyse, HL AB - After many years of owning and operating a Heavy Vehicle Simulator (HVS) Mk III, Gautrans acquired a HVS Mk IV+ in May 2002. In addition to the advanced features that this machine possesses in comparison to its predecessor, the HVS Mk IV+ also has certain operational advantages that will make it more efficient than the Mk III. The HVS Mk IV+ will be utilised in all future Accelerated Pavement Testing (APT) operations undertaken by Gautrans. The differences between the two machines could, however, result in variations in pavement response and test results. Based on this concern and in an effort to ensure uniformity throughout APT with the HVS, a comparative testing project was initiated to compare the effect of the two machines on pavement response. Differences in the pavement response induced by the HVS Mk III and HVS Mk IV+ may be caused by differences in the trafficking speed of the machines (loading frequency), differences in the total load applied by the machines and differences in the contact stresses applied by different tyre brands and tyre widths used on the two machines. An attempt was made to eliminate the effect of total load by developing total load calibration curves for the two HVSs prior to comparative testing. The procedure followed during the comparative testing was to identify two test sections for testing. These test sections were subjected to trafficking by each of the HVSs until elastic and plastic response trends could be established for both test sections. The machines were then swapped and trafficking continued until the new elastic and plastic pavement responses trends could confidently be compared to the original response trends. Small but consistent changes in the elastic deflection were observed when the machines where swapped but these changes were too small to influence the interpretation of the elastic response results under normal testing conditions. The changes in the permanent deformation response that were observed when the machines were swapped are of greater concern and could lead to different conclusions regarding the bearing capacity of the test pavement. It is, however, suspected that the observed differences in pavement response could be caused by differences in the applied total load and contact stresses at the operational trafficking speeds of the machines. Further work is recommended to investigate this. DA - 2003-03 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Accelerated pavement testing KW - APT KW - Heavy vehicle simulator KW - HVS KW - HVS Mk IV+ KW - HVS Mk III LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2003 T1 - First level analysis report: comparative testing of HVS Mk IV+ and HVS Mk III on road D2388 near Cullinan TI - First level analysis report: comparative testing of HVS Mk IV+ and HVS Mk III on road D2388 near Cullinan UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2951 ER - en_ZA


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