Skip to main content

Multiple milling machines removing surface

Milling subcontractor Pavement Recycling Systems removed thousands of tonnes of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) from a runway at Oakland International Airport in California recently. The firm used a fleet of six Wirtgen W 210i cold milling machines to remove the asphalt in less than 60 hours from Runway 12-30, along the shore of San Francisco Bay. In total, 47,000tons of asphalt were milled within a 60-hour time frame, nonstop day and night, plus a single-shift second phase a week later. The firm start
April 24, 2019 Read time: 4 mins
The asphalt was to be milled out at 76mm increments, so if the firm had to cut 203mm, it had to go 229mm deep

Milling subcontractor Pavement Recycling Systems removed thousands of tonnes of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) from a runway at Oakland International Airport in California recently. The firm used a fleet of six 2395 Wirtgen W 210i cold milling machines to remove the asphalt in less than 60 hours from Runway 12-30, along the shore of San Francisco Bay.

In total, 47,000tons of asphalt were milled within a 60-hour time frame, nonstop day and night, plus a single-shift second phase a week later. The firm started milling at 6am on the Monday and worked 12-hour shifts nonstop until about 3:30pm on the Wednesday according to Kurt Eddy, Operations Manager for Milling and Restructuring, for Pavement Recycling Systems.

Immediately after, the prime contractor DeSilva Gates Construction began paving. The short time slot was driven by substantial liquidated damages of over US$700,000/day, payable if the general contractor failed to open the runway on time. However, the paving work was also completed within the set time frame by DeSilva Gates Construction.

The general contractor kept some of the milled RAP on the airport property and used this to correct elevations of taxiways, building up a levee along the bay shoreline, as well as for other construction purposes. The cold milling machines, equipped with the optional wider milling drum, cut at a width of 2.2m, according to Terry Graves, Superintendent for PRS.

The contractor chose to use W 210i mills for the job due to its past experience with this model. The machine is powerful, productive and also versatile. A key feature is its innovative FCS system, which allows the user to switch cutting drums quickly. A contractor can select a drum with a particular tooth pattern to match either the specific finish requirements of an application or the grade of material being cut. The user can also fit different drum widths as required, of 1.5m, 2m or 2.2m. In addition, three adjustable milling drum rotation speeds allow for high milling outputs under changing demands.

However, the challenge was not the width of the passes, but the varying milling depths. With the W 210i, three selectable engine speeds enable complete pavement removal at a full depth of 330mm. However, at the airport, the milling depths varied constantly.


According to the contractor, cutting to the digital models, and staying within the confines of all the different models, was one of the biggest challenges of this job. As a result, an important tool for the firm was Wirtgen’s  LEVEL PRO levelling system. This package continually compares the actual milling depth with the preset target milling depth. LEVEL PRO can work with different sensors – cable, hydraulic cylinder, sonic and slope sensors or laser and sonic ski sensors as well as multiplex systems – and can be extended as required. 3D levelling is also possible with installed interfaces that are compatible with 3D systems from common manufacturers.

The total station system interfaced with Wirtgen’s LEVEL PRO system, which converted the signal to Wirtgen’s language and made the appropriate grade changes based on the currently required elevation. Accuracy of milling was within the close tolerances required.

The speed and the depth varied so the firm went from cutting zero in some areas to 280mm in other areas, depending on what the digital models required. In fact, there were five different models for the W 210i cold milling machines to work with. The firm said that there were benches of pavement remaining everywhere, at all different sizes, shapes and depths. Areas of distressed pavement were identified prior to the milling operation, and they were built into the digital models. There was a minimum requirement of asphalt to be removed for each.

The changes in models were marked using limit lines on the runway surface. Whenever the firm came up to another line painted on the pavement, it would have a model number which it changed in the settings. Essentially, PRS would mill at one depth to a limit line; stop and change the parameters to get to the new depth prescribed; then proceed to the next line, where the setting would have to be changed once again. String lines were painted all over the runway to identify the different tasks. The firm said it could not just start at one side of the runway and go across laterally. Instead, areas were specified for the models. Overlapping one risked running into the next. The problem with overlapping was that if the firm wandered off the area, it would be off-model and essentially off-grade.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Advances in bitumen technology: new applications
    February 16, 2022
    This month, we look at four very different pavement technologies in four very different applications
  • Cold recycling helps rebuild of Brazil’s Ayrton Senna highway
    September 28, 2015
    Brazil’s Ayrton Senna Highway has been rebuilt using cold recycling. Brazil’s SP-070 is also known as the Ayrton Senna Highway and is a major highway in the country, carrying heavy traffic volumes. For its rebuild, the time-saving, cost-efficient and eco-friendly benefits of the cold recycling process have been put to the test. The SP-070 provides a key transport link between São Paulo and Campos do Jordão, Vale do Paraíba and Rio de Janeiro, as well as being the main access route to Guarulhos Interna
  • Road Markings to reduce fatal wrong-way driving
    October 31, 2012
    The latest road marking systems have been used to reduce potentially fatal wrong-way driving and promote the recent EURO 2012 football tournament in Poland and Ukraine. Guy Woodford reports According to statistics quoted by leading road marking firm Geveko, a total of 1,753 people were killed in the United States in wrong-way driving accidents from1996-2000. Wrong-way driving is also a significant issue across Europe and other parts of the world. Work to combat the potentially lethal activity took place re
  • In control - with machine control technology
    June 21, 2016
    Advances with machine control technologies are providing major benefits right across the construction sector - Mike Woof writes With the massive bauma 2016 exhibition now having run its course, the construction sector look set to benefit from a range of new machine control technologies. These systems are being offered across a range of different segments in the equipment sector. Bulldozing was one of the first portions of the earthmoving segment to benefit from machine control systems, but a vast array o