Skip to main content

Highway delineator system aids crash reduction

A new delineator design is said to be helping to reduce accidents on a 200mile stretch of one of the world’s most treacherous highways. Pexco LLC has produced the ‘Dalton Delineator’ for the Dalton Highway, a remote 414mile road in Alaska, reported to be the sixth most dangerous roadway in the world. The road safety system has a cantilever structure consisting of a short length of a Davidson Flexi-Guide FG 400 Roadside Delineator post mounted to a special flexible coupler.
March 21, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The Dalton Delineator aims to reduce crashes on one of world’s most dangerous highways
A new delineator design is said to be helping to reduce accidents on a 200mile stretch of one of the world’s most treacherous highways. 301 Pexco LLC has produced the ‘Dalton Delineator’ for the Dalton Highway, a remote 414mile road in Alaska, reported to be the sixth most dangerous roadway in the world.

The road safety system has a cantilever structure consisting of a short length of a Davidson Flexi-Guide FG 400 Roadside Delineator post mounted to a special flexible coupler. The polyurethane-made coupler is attached to a square steel tube support by the roadside. The delineator post, also known as an arm, projects horizontally out from the shoulder, above the roadway. The use of white delineator arms on one side of the road and green delineator arms on the opposite side, likened by Pexco LLC to the running lights on a boat, is said to give motorists and highways maintenance workers clear indication of their position on the road, even in the midst of a blinding snowstorm.

Half of all vehicle crashes on the Dalton Highway occur during daylight hours, while a quarter take place at night when drivers are travelling on non-lighted sections of the road.

The installation of the Dalton Delineator, which began in summer 2011, comes after Alaska DOT asked Pexco LLC in early 2009 to come up with new ideas to build on the success of its existing Dalton Highway FG 400 Roadside Delineator post.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New version of world’s longest floating bridge
    August 12, 2014
    The creation of a new version of the world’s longest floating bridge in Seattle, in the US state of Washington, is among the world’s most eye-catching current bridge engineering projects. It is an impressive example of the health of the bridge replacement sector, particularly in the US, leaving it well placed for growth. Guy Woodford reports Already the world’s longest floating bridge at over 2,310m long, the Governor Albert D Rosellini-Evergreen Point Floating Bridge in Seattle in the United States is g
  • Making the U-turn
    August 2, 2012
    Political hostility to a toll road project in Australia has been turned around by the quality and amenity of the project writes Adrian Greeman Cars, trucks and vans were taking to the new EastLink toll road in Melbourne with enthusiasm this July, pleased to try out its 39km route for time and cost savings. As well as the convenience of the uncongested route, drivers were also able to view an extraordinary multi-shaded perspective of transparent green and orange noise wall panels, burnt earth-coloured retai
  • Pre-stressed bridge decks use modular formwork system
    July 9, 2012
    Imaginative formwork, often using modular components, is helping to shape some challenging bridges worldwide. Patrick Smith reports Traffic volumes in and around Prague have swollen massively in recent years, pushing the existing road network to the limits of its capacity. To permanently ease congestion in the Czech capital's centre, a multi-lane orbital motorway is under construction as a high capacity bypass for central Prague and to link up all the motorways and other major highways radiating from the ci
  • Versilis offers Safety Cloud alerts
    September 3, 2021
    Versilis has partnered with Haas Alert to offer motorists Safety Cloud, an infrastructure-to-vehicle (I2V) solution that sends notifications of road layout changes and lane closures