Skip to main content

On track with Kistler

How to survey and safeguard a sensitive load-bearing road above a section of railway line? This was the challenge facing Revotec, a Vienna-based bridge monitoring specialist. The solution was KiTraffic Statistics, the weigh-in-motion (WIM) system from Kistler.
February 15, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
Bridge monitoring by Revotec on behalf of Austrian Federal Railways: installing two rows of Lineas sensors for KiTraffic Statistics (image courtesy Kistler Group)

Founded in 2014, Revotec is a young civil engineering practice specialising in structural dynamics, especially, but not exclusively, for railway bridges. Projects frequently involve fatigue assessments and vibration tests, for example on steel supporting structures that are excited artificially with electromechanical shakers.

"We're currently working on a project for Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) where – for the first time – we're using weigh-in-motion by Kistler to monitor a sensitive road bridge over a railway line and determine the real loads,” said Michael Vospernig, one of Revotec's two founders.

This small bridge is part of the access road to a village but because there is a large sawmill nearby, the bridge is crossed every day by many trucks carrying heavy loads of timber.

"When the project began in January 2020, there was already some visible damage to the bridge with several cracks in the supporting structure. On behalf of ÖBB, we installed the strain gauges for measurements of the supporting structure in March. Then in May, we added the axle load measurement with the system from Kistler and that installation was completed within one day.”

KiTraffic Statistics showed many of the trucks and tractors with trailers exceeded the overall weight limit of 40tonnes – sometimes by as much as five or 10 tonnes. Even vehicles weighing less than 40tonnes often had axle loads of more than 12.5tonnes - the maximum permitted in Austria. "Thanks to the data acquired, the authorities were able to penalise vehicles weighing over 44tonnes so as to prevent any further overloading of the bridge. But this couldn't be achieved overnight, because the legal basis for weigh-in-motion is still largely lacking," noted Vospernig.

The planned reconstruction of the bridge was also delayed due to unresolved land rights issues although construction is scheduled to start soon. This means that Kistler's WIM system has several important roles to play: reliable classification of vehicles and identification of overloads have now become possible and changes in the bridge's condition can also be determined more accurately in combination with measurements of the supporting structure.

Installation was completed in one day (image courtesy Kistler Group)
Installation was completed in one day (image courtesy Kistler Group)

"The system is efficient to use and CSV file export makes it simple to merge the data with the supporting structure measurements. In this case, the result was an almost linear correlation between the influencing factors and the effects on the supporting structure,” said Vospernig. “Thanks to the high quality and reliability of the data, this method of long-term measurement could even be applied to other bridges."

Despite some fierce resistance from haulage companies and transporters, the local authorities were ultimately successful in preventing virtually any further overloading of the bridge. Later, Revotec installed a camera system with vehicle numberplate recognition in order to extend the "long arm of the law". The WIM measurements were backed up by spot measurements using a mobile vehicle weighing system on behalf of ÖBB and in cooperation with the authorities.

Vospernig believes that applications could include projects by ASFINAG, the Austrian Motorway and Expressway Financing Corporation, focusing on traffic data acquisition and bridge monitoring. "KiTraffic Statistics delivers highly reliable data – the system is simple to set up and its cost-to-benefit ratio is good. Users can do a lot of the work themselves with the help of the instructions. Good contact with Kistler Austria and personal onsite support with the setup were extra benefits."

Meanwhile, the demand for data-based systems is on the increase, explains Vospernig. Individual solutions continue to dominate the market at present, but there could be a trend towards modular systems and even turnkey solutions in the medium term. “At some point in the future, automated systems to measure supporting structures and axle loads are likely to become part of the infrastructure. They would allow real-time condition monitoring and predictive maintenance, based on degradation lines and at varying intervals," he said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Losing your car ain’t as hard as you would think
    April 29, 2015
    Thankfully it doesn’t happen too often, but forgetting where you parked your car can be an embarrassing moment, or several days, as one man in the UK recently found. Jason Matthews, 40, ran the Manchester City Marathon on April 19 in five hours and 11 minutes and then spent an additional several hours looking for his Saab 93 Sport. He said he couldn’t recall where he had parked the vehicle. He walked back around some of the 26-mile – nearly 42km - course, before driving around in a taxi for 40 minutes an
  • Efficient road maintenance with Simex
    October 1, 2022

    Simex at Bauma Munich from 24 to 30 October, Hall C5, Booth 325.

    Bauma Munich – the most anticipated trade fair event in terms of strategic importance, turnout, new product launches and media impact for the earthmoving sector – has always been an opportunity for Simex to show to its partners and users its technical quality. The ability to innovate and do research, combining the new models in the range with new technological concepts, it’s the Simex way to outline the paths to be followed in the future.

  • Terex cranes in a tight spot in Michigan
    February 6, 2017
    Terex cranes have been involved in a multiple bridge repair project in the US More than 96,000 vehicles per day travel a stretch of I-96, including its 52-year-old bridges. The Michigan Department of Transportation is in the midst of a two-year US$77 million project to repair bridges and relieve increasing congestion along Interstate 96 at the U.S. Highway 23 interchange in Livingston County. Toebe Construction along with joint venture partner Kamminga & Roodvoets are bringing in a lot of lifting powe
  • Kapsch gantry goes green
    April 19, 2023
    Kapsch TrafficCom has put a new spin on a familiar piece of steel and aluminium infrastructure: the motorway gantry.