Skip to main content

Flexible resin speeds asphalt surface repair

Stirling Lloyd is using innovative micro-trenching technology during a £1.1million (US$1.72million) project to improve Internet infrastructure on the Shetland Isles off the north-east Scottish coast.
March 15, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
2314 Stirling Lloyd is using innovative micro-trenching technology during a £1.1million (US$1.72million) project to improve Internet infrastructure on the Shetland Isles off the north-east Scottish coast.

Fibre optic cables were fitted in a micro-trench 20mm wide and 150mm deep following road excavation, before the company’s Safetrack Crack Infill (SCI) system was used to reinstate the road surface for less closure delays.

Initiated and funded by Shetland Island Councils (SIC's) and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), the project saw Stirling Lloyd’s specialist contractor Tulloch Developments cut a micro-trench into the road surface which connects junction boxes at approximately 1km intervals. Once the small fibre optic bundle had been installed, the HAPAS-approved SCI’s free-flowing, flexible resin was used to infill the trench, while supporting it on both sides.

Stirling Lloyd claims the exceptionally high bond strength of the SCI effectively bonds the cut asphalt surface back together and the finished repair is flush with the road surface ensuring no problems with standing water drainage or road ride quality.

The project’s reinstatement element, traditionally the slowest part of any trenching process, was completed at a rate of up to 600m a day. The rapid application of SCI meant the usual major traffic management costs of a highways maintenance project were kept to a minimum. 

Part of the 'Digital Shetland Strategy', the works will give fibre optic broadband to 80% of the islands' communities by the end of the first quarter of 2016, transforming communication between the Shetland Islands and the rest of the world and opening up new business opportunities.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Motorway's tricky cable installation
    February 6, 2012
    The UK is now benefiting from the installation of sophisticated automated traffic management equipment and information signs on its motorway network. But with heavy traffic volumes on these roads, novel techniques have had to be implemented. One such operation, organised by client The Highways Agency and its consulting engineer A.One+, has recently been underway on the M56 motorway between Junctions 9 and 16 in north-west England under the Triple Package Advanced Works designation. To minimise traffic distu
  • Montreal’s new Champlain Bridge is shaping up for Christmas
    September 10, 2018
    Montreal’s Champlain Bridges - one going up, one coming down, reports David Arminas The importance of the new Champlain Bridge to Montreal and Canada can’t be overstated, given the crumbling nature of the not-so-old original Champlain Bridge. The original steel truss affair across the St Lawrence River and the adjacent St Lawrence Seaway canal is “a lifeline for residents and businesses” in greater Montréal, according to the national Auditor General - the public sector spending watchdog. “It accommodates
  • Tarmac goes low-carbon on UK’s A64
    December 20, 2024
    The trial was delivered on a 2.4km section of England’s A64 strategic highway, the eastbound carriageway at junction 44 near the town of Bramham in North Yorkshire county.