Georgia Tech's Research News - January 2007
Pavement Marking: Automated System Installs Pavement Markers, Improving Safety For Road Crews and Drivers
by Jane M. Sanders
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GTRI researcher Colin Usher uses a touch-screen monitor mounted
in the cab of the truck. It provides the primary operator interface
to the automated raised pavement marker (RPM) placement system
developed by GTRI.
Georgia Tech Photo by Gary Meek
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On rainy nights in Georgia and across the nation,
drivers greatly benefit from small, reflective markers that make roadway
lanes more visible.
There are more than three million of these safety devices, called
raised pavement markers (RPMs), in service on Georgia highways. They
are installed and then need to be replaced about every two years by
road crews who consider the task one of the riskiest they face. Workers
typically ride on a seat cantilevered off the side of a trailer just
inches from highway traffic.
Manual RPM placement is not only risky
for personnel, but it is also expensive and time-consuming. A typical
RPM placement operation includes
four vehicles and a six-person crew. All the vehicles must stop
at each marker location, so there is tremendous wear on the equipment
and increased fuel use.
The Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT)
believed there was a better way to do it and funded the Georgia
Tech Research Institute
(GTRI) to develop a first-of-its-kind system capable of automatically
placing RPMs along the lane stripes while in motion. After almost
three years of research and development, GTRI expects to deliver
a prototype system early this year. Because of widespread interest
in
the system, researchers will present a report on their project on
Jan. 23 at the National Research Council’s Transportation Research
Board Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C.
“The advantages of our automated system are: it’s less
labor-intensive, it’s faster and safer, uses less fuel, and
it causes less wear and tear on GDOT equipment,” explained
project manager Wiley Holcombe, a GTRI senior research engineer.
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During a June 2006 demonstration, GTRI researchers Wiley
Holcombe and Steve Robertson examine the placement mechanism
on truck-mounted, automated raised pavement marker (RPM) placement
machine that GTRI developed for the Georgia Department of Transportation.
Georgia Tech Photo by Gary Meek
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Engineers
conducted the work in two phases. First, they designed an RPM-placement
mechanism using pressure-sensitive adhesive and a lane-stripe tracking
system. Then, they developed a full-scale, truck-mounted RPM placement
system. It is based on a single GDOT-owned truck and includes the
lane-stripe tracking system, and electrical power, compressed air,
hydraulic power, and adhesive melting and dispensing systems. Some
components of the system were off-the-shelf parts, but the GTRI
Machine Services Department fabricated most of the custom components
for the system, Holcombe notes.
After some field-testing, the project
resulted in a prototype system capable of dispensing an RPM onto
the pavement along with the necessary
hot-melt adhesive applied at 380 degrees Fahrenheit while traveling
at 5 miles an hour. A pattern-change mechanism can position two
placement mechanisms to accommodate any of GDOT’s five specified
RPM placement patterns, Holcombe explains.
Operation of the system
only requires two people. An operator on the back of the truck
loads the adhesive melters with adhesive and
stacks RPMs in the hoppers from which they are dispensed, depending
on the placement pattern. Meanwhile, the driver of the truck must
maintain alignment between the stripe pattern on the road and
a caster wheel on a boom in front of the truck. Also, the driver touches
a computer screen in the cab to indicate to the placement system
the new stripe pattern each time the caster wheel crosses a stripe
pattern change.
RPMs are dispensed from the hoppers onto a loader
arm, which deposits them onto a telescoping slide that connects
to a placement mechanism
on an attached carriage. The carriage has a 3-foot range of travel
and is moved laterally to keep the placement mechanism centered
along the road stripe. RPMs are then typically applied about 80
feet apart. It takes about 35 milliseconds from the time the edge
of the RPM hits the ground to the time it’s flush with the
road, Holcombe notes.
“The GDOT’s primary use for the automated RPM placement machine
will be placing markers on the skip lines for interstate and multi-lane
highways,” said GDOT spokeswoman Karlene Barron. “These
types of routes pose the highest safety risks to our employees and
equipment.
“The GDOT also plans to use the system on high-traffic-volume
secondary or two-lane roads, when possible,” Barron added. “Using
the automated system, we will not have to stop at every placement,
which will increase safety and productivity plus reduce wear and
tear on GDOT equipment. Plus the operator will be high on the back
of the machine instead of near ground level.”
Six of GDOT’s
seven district offices have their own RPM placement crews, and there
are four other crews that work statewide. GDOT
also plans to use the system in the metro Atlanta area.
GTRI’s
automated raised pavement marking system could be used outside Georgia,
though Holcombe explains that its design is most
appropriate for Southern states with warmer climates. In regions
that get a lot of snow, RPMs must be applied somewhat differently
to reduce the risk of damage to RPMs by snow-clearing equipment.
For
more information, contact Craig Wyvill at 404-894-3412 or craig.wyvill@gtri.gatech.edu – or
Wiley Holcombe at 404-407-8836 or wiley.holcombe@gtri.gatech.edu
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