Skip to main content

Thin surface whitetopping for busy roads

In the US, considerable experience has been gained with thin white-topping (TWT), with the technique now being used in other countries as well. In the US hundreds of km of TWT is being paved every year, much of it across the mid-western states. A variation of white-topping is being used in Oregon to replace badly rutted asphalt truck lanes on primarily long uphill grades with durable, continuously reinforced concrete pavement (CRCP). Oregon has carried out several of these concrete inlay projects over the
April 5, 2017 Read time: 4 mins
Thin concrete overlays are often used to provide new surfaces on lanes used by heavy trucks
In the US, considerable experience has been gained with thin white-topping (TWT), with the technique now being used in other countries as well. In the US hundreds of km of TWT is being paved every year, much of it across the mid-western states.

A variation of white-topping is being used in Oregon to replace badly rutted asphalt truck lanes on primarily long uphill grades with durable, continuously reinforced concrete pavement (CRCP). Oregon has carried out several of these concrete inlay projects over the last several years. The Concrete Placing Company (CPC) of Boise, Idaho has successfully completed three of these inlay projects in the last three paving seasons. One project in 2014 on I-84 near La Grande, Oregon, and two recently completed projects located on I-84 near Durkee, Oregon and I-5 near Curtin, Oregon.

For these inlay projects in Oregon, the width of the badly rutted truck (slow) lanes are milled out to a nominal 203mm. The asphalt shoulders and passing lanes are left intact providing they are in good condition, and if they are deteriorated they are patched and repaired. The total concrete pavement thickness is 279mm, with a nominal 76mm of new concrete pavement above the existing asphalt surface.

This gives a number of benefits and firstly, the contractor is not trying to match new concrete pavement surfaces to irregular, old asphalt surfaces which would adversely impact concrete smoothness. Secondly, once the new concrete surface reaches a specified strength level, traffic can travel on and off the new concrete pavement. Thirdly, if only the truck (slow) lane is being replaced with CRCP, the new asphalt overlay for the passing lane and shoulders can be brought up to a smooth, new truck lane, concrete surface. And where the passing lane is also replaced with concrete, the paver has a new, machine-placed concrete slab on which to match the companion passing lane slab.

The terrain of the 2014 La Grande project entailed steep grades up to 6%, super-elevated curves up to 10%, and limited construction space only allowing room for the total station robots on one side of the paving spread and concrete trucks on the other side. To feed concrete over the CRCP pavement, a placer/side-feeder with a retractable side-feeding skip was required to let concrete trucks and construction traffic pass. Use of an FAMC/Leica PaveSmart machine control system and GPS guidance for grade and steering reference was provided to the paving train, consisting of the G&Z PS1200, S600, and TC1500.
This saved space on either side of the paving spread. As many as eight 265 Leica Geosystems units were used concurrently to guide the G&Z S600 paver along super-elevated curves. With an average 70km haul roundtrip, the average concrete production rates were 153m3/hr. Despite the challenges of this project, the smoothness achieved excellent numbers, scoring a job average PRI of 23mm/km. Tiebars were inserted while paving on the truck climbing lane of this project.

More room was available on the 2016 Durkee project because of the relatively straight road alignment between the eastbound and westbound lanes of I-84. For this project, CPC used its new G&Z MP550 Material Placer to feed the G&Z S600 paver. Curing and longitudinal tining followed with their G&Z TC1500. The challenge of this project was that the concrete plant site was located 24km away from the paving, limiting their average job production rate to 124m3/hr. Despite the challenges with the mix, the job average smoothness was an IRI of 883mm/km.

If existing road conditions permit, the Oregon Department of Transportation’s preferred method of reconstructing roadways involves concrete inlays. Oregon plans to continue this program of replacing rutted asphalt truck lanes with concrete inlays. To maintain efficiency in the flow of traffic, CPC has inlayed one lane, then returned to mill the subsequent lane next to the new overlay. This was achieved on the Anlauf- Elkhead project on I-5 in southern Oregon. The crew had placed a 7.6m and a 3.9m wide section, then returned to add a 3.6m lane. Tiebars were also drilled and epoxied into the slabs.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Roadtec changes the game of asphalt paving
    December 20, 2016
    Truly innovative is Roadtec’s Shuttle Buggy material transfer vehicle. John Irvine, President of Roadtec, explains how and why the ‘Buggy’ changed the game of asphalt paving Road paving technology changed dramatically in the 1930s when the American inventor Harry Barber unveiled the very first asphalt paver. Barber was what we today would call a “game-changer”. Innovations like Barber’s don’t come around often. In fact, decades can pass until another breakthrough product pushes the productivity and q
  • Kenya rehabilitates, widens, tolls Northern Corridor
    November 8, 2017
    A massive highway project in Kenya will boost transport for the country as well as its neighbours - Shem Oirere reports. Kenya has commenced the process of rehabilitating, expanding and tolling of 657km of East Africa’s Northern Corridor that is anchored on the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa and which links the gateway with landlocked countries of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and parts of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
  • Twin layer paving evolves
    November 2, 2012
    Dual layer paving offers benefits to wear life as well as major cost reductions - Mike Woof reports The concept of laying the binder course and wearing course at the same time is not new to the road construction market. Various contractors have been working on systems over a number of years, with several manufacturers helping directly with these projects. A number of firms have investigated this method but three manufacturers in particular, Dynapac and Vögele in Europe and Sumitomo in Japan, have made major
  • Bolivia’s new highway
    October 10, 2017
    Bolivia’s new highway will provide better access into mountain areas – Mauro Nogarin writes At the beginning of 2015, work began on the construction and paving for the Tupiza - Atocha - Uyuni highway project. The route is located in Bolivia’s Potosí department: it is 189m in length and forms part of the Southwest Basic Road Network (RVF) of Bolivia. The completion of this important route is requiring funding worth US$150 million, of which 72% is being delivered through loans from the European Investment