WSDOT issues comprehensive pavement preventive maintenance study

July 30, 2018

The 115-page study aimed to determine the effectiveness of a range of preventive maintenance treatments for extending pavement life

A six-year study of hot-mix asphalt preventive maintenance techniques conducted by the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) indicates that a range of treatments can effectively extend pavement life—using a combination of crack sealing, chip sealing and dig outs—for five years or more.

The 115-page study aimed to determine the effectiveness of a range of preventive maintenance treatments for extending pavement life using cost data to help define which treatments are the most cost effective. Roughly 69 test sites were evaluated on a yearly basis since initiation of the study in 2012, with the evaluations terminated in the fall of 2017.

The pavement preventive maintenance techniques studied were crack sealing (12 sites); chip sealing (4 sites); wheel path chip seal patching (2 sites); wheel path chip seal rut filling (5 sites); chip seal plus crack seal (2 sites); dig outs (22 sites); dig outs plus crack sealing (4 sites); dig outs plus chip sealing (6 sites); and blade patching (8 sites). The study also included four "control sites" that received no pavement treatment, WSDOT noted.

The agency's study found that virtually all of the treatments are performing well and preserving the pavements for extended periods of time, but that the use of crack sealing, chip sealing and dig outs together can extend pavement life for five years or more. The data on wheel path chip seal patching and rut filling indicated only a four-year extension could be gained, while the duration of blade patches is one to two years before additional fixes are needed.

The costs of the various treatments also were compared by calculating the cost to treat a strip of pavement 1 ft in length and one lane wide or roughly 12 ft in width—allowing treatments that do not cover an entire lane, such as wheel path chip sealing, to be compared side by side with treatments that do cover the full lane. The cheapest treatment is crack sealing, while the most expensive is the combination of dig out/chip sealing, WSDOT found.

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Source: AASHTO Journal

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