Skip to main content

WJ Guardian system keeps stud installers safer in workzones

WJ’s latest innovation is a method of road stud installation designed to remove vulnerable operatives from the carriageway The bespoke design of the WJ Guardian system allows the complete road stud installation process to take place while protecting operatives within an integrated safety cell of an 18tonne truck. The UK has used 12 million road studs on its national and local road network, all requiring maintenance or replacement at some point. Traditional methods of installation by hand or milling ma
January 26, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Installation operatives out of harm's way
WJ’s latest innovation is a method of road stud installation designed to remove vulnerable operatives from the carriageway

The bespoke design of the 8037 WJ Guardian system allows the complete road stud installation process to take place while protecting operatives within an integrated safety cell of an 18tonne truck.

The UK has used 12 million road studs on its national and local road network, all requiring maintenance or replacement at some point. Traditional methods of installation by hand or milling machine require operatives to be in the centre of the carriageway and, therefore, at risk of injury while working within live traffic conditions.

That risk varies from site to site, but always with a need for safety zones, either stop/stop type traffic management or road closures, to comply with the regulatory requirements.

The WJ Guardian method does not negate this need for safety zones, but it does significantly reduce the actual safe work zone required. The method ensures that the operatives do not need to stand and operate equipment from the opposite carriageway to the vehicle. Instead, they are protected within the vehicle’s safety cell as well as within a regulated safety zone.  

The development provides designers with the potential to eliminate a substantial number of road closures and reduce disruption within communities close to the work. WJ’s recent development focus has been on designing out risk through engineering and using its road marking vehicles as a protective safety barrier (see box). The patent pending WJ Guardian road stud installation technology is Phase 2 of a development project led by WJ’s engineering division in Elland, West Yorkshire in the UK.

With computer-aided design (CAD) software, phase 1 involved development of a lateral moving milling head so the installation vehicle would not need to straddle the centre of the road. CAD was used to simulate and validate the mechanical and physical properties of the design, ensuring that a legally compliant, robust and safe process was achieved even before component parts were manufactured and the truck was built.
Phase 2 involved the full design of a specialist installation vehicle with a protected control hub cell integrated within the chassis. It was important that a side under run device used fully complied with stringent requirements within the UK’s statutory Individual Vehicle Approval (IVA) scheme. From this safe position, the road operative activates the drill, vacuums up debris, applies hot bitumen grout and places the road stud before the driver of the vehicle moves onto the next position.

The Guardian system can be used to install all types of road studs. But, it was with this process in mind that WJ also developed the BSEN 1463 approved Allux prismatic road stud complete with stabilising shank.

WJ enthusiastically engage and share best practice in this way with clients, the 5149 Road Safety Markings Association (RSMA) and other stakeholders to establish the best work-related health and safety practice. Many of WJ’s ideas have contributed to improvements across the highways industry.

George Lee, chief executive of the UK’s Road Safety Markings Association, said the system was “a real step change in road worker safety”.

WJ is in the process of retrofitting operator platforms to many of their standard studding rigs so that a measure of safety can be extended to other operatives.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A further crash test has been performed on SMA’s End Terminal
    July 5, 2016
    The latest crash test for the end terminal T4, made by SMA – Safety Modular Absorber - has been carried out to the EN 1317-7 standard. It was done in addition to the complete set of crash tests performed according to part 7 of the EN 1317. The test TT 6.3.110 had already been executed on the critical impact point selected by the CSI TestLab. SMA Road Safety said it shows “the excellence of the SMA end terminal to absorb the impacts coming from the opposite traffic direction”. The critical impact point is at
  • Trends in asphalt plant innovations
    August 27, 2019
    Key trends exist in the asphalt plant market, with manufacturers focussing on meeting customer needs and industry trends
  • Energy absorbing safety barrier
    March 9, 2012
    Barrier Systems says that its new tensioned barrier offers high energy absorbing capabilities in head-on collisions. The company says that this is because the X-Tension technology is a tension-based solution rather than compression-based. The new range delivers good performance in these applications, as energy is absorbed with resistance at the impact head rather than being transferred down the rail as occurs with other systems. Even high-angle (15° during testing) impacts on the nose resulted in the vehicl
  • Optimising operations with construction software gains
    May 20, 2015
    Innovations in construction software are helping boost project efficiency and optimising project operations – Clive Davidson writes Over the past decade, while construction engineers have been putting up buildings or infrastructure, software engineers have been developing a parallel universe where virtual buildings or infrastructure can be created in ever increasing detail. What started with 2D architectural drawings in computer-aided design (CAD) systems, has become a multi-dimensional world, with 3D ge