Skip to main content

Houston Airport paving work for Dynapac

Equipment from Dynapac is playing an important role in improving facilities at Houston Airport. The firm´s TH E technology has been employed to deliver a surface to grade, with high levels of pre-compaction and also automation.
May 23, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
Contractor Flatiron has completed its training with a Dynapac paver and compactors and is laying new RCC surfacing at Houston Airport

The project is being carried out by contractor Flatiron, together with rental firm and dealer Closner Equipment. The local dealer delivered an SD2550CS Dynapac paver fitted with a high compaction screed as well as two Dynapac rollers, a CC6200 VI and a CP2700. The paver was highly specified and fitted with technology including a Trimble 3D Leveling System, Dynapac´s MatTracker width assistant, a MOBA levelling tool and the MOBA Big Ski Plus.

All these systems are helping the customer to achieve high paving quality, which is crucial for an airport jobsite.

The customer had three key requests that the machine needed to deliver. The first was good grade control, which is crucial for airports, while the second was for maximum pre-compaction as this is vital for roller compacted concrete (RCC) surfaces due to the short time slots for material processing. The third was for a high level of automation so that the paving crew would be able to handle the process with at most three people around the paver. The combination of advanced levelling systems, the MatTracker and the TH E screed series delivered what was requested. The machine’s automatic functions made it easy to handle the material handling, while the screed delivered the maximum compaction possible for the material used. The combination of MOBA and Trimble levelling and the integration of both systems into the MOBA remote controls made it possible to switch between both systems easily during paving.  

Dynapac, Closner and the Flatiron crew completed an extensive training week where they learned how to handle the machine, set the correct height and to use the integrated levelling automatic functions. A key task was the setup of the material flow and the use of the auto-fill function by processing the RCC material, as RCC requires short processing times.

After three training days the team carried out a final test strip to measure compaction levels on a material grade similar to the material planned to use for the final job. The paver performed well and the crew was able to handle the machine based on training. The most important information for the crew to get out of the final test strip was the roller behaviour and the compaction achieved. The tamper bar screed on the Dynapac machine delivers a far higher percentage of pre-compaction than can be achieved with US-Style vibration screeds.

After the training, both Closner and Flatiron were very pleased with the machine performance and the service Dynapac provided as support for the project.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Smarter compaction equipment from key manufacturers
    June 23, 2015
    Intelligent compaction technologies continue to advance in sophistication - Mike Woof writes Ever more sophisticated intelligent compaction technologies are being offered to customers, which can boost working efficiency and help improve construction quality. This is particularly the case for the compaction of asphalt running surfaces. Asphalt cooling leaves only a short time window during which a paved mat can be properly compacted, so intelligent compaction systems offer major gains for contractors and cli
  • Dual layer, hot to hot paving at German airport
    August 18, 2015
    An airport in Germany has seen the use of very innovative asphalt paving techniques, with the use of dual-layer, hot-to-hot working. The method was used to meet a very tight schedule for the runway rebuilding work, while also delivering the high quality required. Two InLine Pave trains from Vögele were used at Rostock-Laage Airport to lay a new surface and binder course. The operation was innovative as the process used both hot-to-hot, echelon paving as well as dual layer, hot-on-hot working. Using this
  • Tough competition in concrete paving market
    February 13, 2012
    One thing is clear in the concrete slipforming sector. This comparatively niche market for equipment is rapidly becoming a good deal more competitive as key manufacturers jostle for position.
  • Machine control boosting paving quality
    April 27, 2015
    The use of machine control technology on a bypass construction job has boosted quality quality control is a topic that clients as well as contractors are finding increasingly important. Control systems are being used more and more often on construction sites as a result, so as to collect data on a range of processes. This includes looking at the asphalt being supplied to site and on the quality of paving during construction. Using this data, processes can be optimised in the medium-term and, in the long-ter