SUPERPAVE Digest 27

Topics covered in this issue include:

4) Construction Advice

by "William O'Reilly" <>

5) Re: Construction Advice

by Affan Habib <>

6) Construction Advice -Reply

by Paul Mack <>

7) RE: Construction Advice

by "Gerald Huber" <>

10) Re: Construction Advice

by Delmar Salomon <>

13) Re: Construction Advice

by Chris Blades <>

16) RE: Superpave Construction Advice

by

19) RE: Superpave Construction Advice

by MARSHA RAY <>

21) RE: Superpave Construction Advice

by MARSHA RAY <>

24) RE: Superpave Construction Advice

by MARSHA RAY <>

26) RE: Superpave Construction Advice

by MARSHA RAY <>

Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 14:19:45 -0500

From: "William O'Reilly" <>

To: <>

Subject: Construction Advice

I serve as a Project Engineer for the Mississippi DOT and am about to start

an overlay which will be the first SUPERPAVE project that my office has

been associated with. What advice can anyone give me that I could use as

Project Engineer and that would be helpful to the personnel from my office

who will be on the road. An help will be appreciated.

William O'Reilly

Work email:

Home email:

Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 15:15:30 -0500 (CDT)

From: Affan Habib <>

To:

Cc:

Subject: Re: Construction Advice

You may want to contact Doughlas Shilling at (913)776-5077. His

construction company Shilling Construction Co., constructed Superpave

base and surface course for the K-177 last year. I was involved in the

design as a graduate student at Kansas State University. I might answer

any specific question regarding the design. However, as far as the

construction is concerned Dough Shilling, I think, would be extremely

helpful. You might also contact Fred Swell at (913)776-4714.

Good luck!

Affan Habib

Graduate Research Assistant

Kansas State university

On Fri, 22 Aug 1997, William O'Reilly wrote:

> I serve as a Project Engineer for the Mississippi DOT and am about to start

> an overlay which will be the first SUPERPAVE project that my office has

> been associated with. What advice can anyone give me that I could use as

> Project Engineer and that would be helpful to the personnel from my office

> who will be on the road. An help will be appreciated.

>

> William O'Reilly

>

> Work email:

> Home email:

>

>

>

Date: Mon, 25 Aug 1997 10:03:15 -0500

From: Paul Mack <>

To:

Subject: Construction Advice -Reply

See Roads and Bridges August 97 for a good article.

Also see Lead State Guidance Statements issued last Spring. They can

be found on the Internet at the South Central Superpave Center. If you

cannot access that, let me know and we'll electronically transfer the

document to you.

Paul Mack

Date: Mon, 25 Aug 1997 07:45:00 -0700

From: "Gerald Huber" <>

To:

Subject: RE: Construction Advice

Your question is open enough that it is difficult to answer. In many ways

Superpave will be like other hot mix but depending on the experience you

have with current Marshall mixes you may need to do some things differently.

Plant operations and trucking should be no different. Superpave mixes seem

to be more resistant to segregation which is good news.

The mix should lay pretty much the same. The rollers need to be right tight

to the paver. No hanging back waiting for the mix to cool. You may not

have any problems with compaction. If you do it will either be that the mix

is tender or that density will be hard to get.

Tender has shown up in some mixes. It appears during the middle of

compaction when temperatures are 250 to 225 F. If the tenderness is not too

severe the best solution is to hold off rolling during the tender

temperature range. If it is severe call back.

Density can be hard to achieve if lift thicknesses are too thin. Florida

has found that mixes were permeable when laid at the same thickness as the

old Marshall mixes. Moving to 4 time nominal maximum size greatly eases

compaction.

I think that should be the main things to look out for. As I said, write

back if something comes up.

Gerry Huber

Heritage Research Group

317 390 3141 tel

317 486 5095 fax

----------

From:

To: Gerald Huber; superpave

Subject: Construction Advice

Date: Wednesday, January 01, 1997 12:19PM

From:

Date: Fri, Aug 22, 1997 12:19 PM

Subject: Construction Advice

To: Gerald Huber; superpave

I serve as a Project Engineer for the Mississippi DOT and am about to start

an overlay which will be the first SUPERPAVE project that my office has

been associated with. What advice can anyone give me that I could use as

Project Engineer and that would be helpful to the personnel from my office

who will be on the road. An help will be appreciated.

William O'Reilly

Work email:

Home email:

From: "William O'Reilly" <>

To: <>

Subject: Construction Advice

Date: Tue, 26 Aug 97 07:25:40 +0600

From: "Kenneth Hobson" <>

To: "Superpave Listserve" <>

Subject: Ken's newest Superpave Spreadsheet 4u

I have placed my latest Lotus123 v5 Superpave spreadsheet in the zip file:

http://www.telepath.com/khobson/odot/liqlab/spchart.zip

It does 5 trial blends, up to 6 aggregates, all size designs 12,5mm, 9.5mm etc., graphs 1-5 trial blends on 0.45

power chart with restricted zones and control points, densification tables and graphs, 5 batching sheets,

volumterics, and more. It is still evolving. If you find an error in it or have any better ideas then please email me.

At http://www.telepath.com/khobson/odot/liqlab/liqlab.html I have some more superpave items like the graphing

and calculation for mixing and compaction temperatures based on two rotational viscosity results.

I hope you get some benefit from my contributions. :-)

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Work email:

Home email:

Home Page: http://www.telepath.com/khobson

Wpwin Tips: http://www.telepath.com/khobson/listserv.html

Work Phone: 405-521-2677

Work Fax 405-522-0552

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Tue, 26 Aug 1997 21:19:21 -0600

From: Delmar Salomon <>

To:

Subject: Re: Construction Advice

Gerald Huber wrote:

>

> Your question is open enough that it is difficult to answer. In many ways

> Superpave will be like other hot mix but depending on the experience you

> have with current Marshall mixes you may need to do some things differently.

> Plant operations and trucking should be no different. Superpave mixes seem

> to be more resistant to segregation which is good news.

>

> The mix should lay pretty much the same. The rollers need to be right tight

> to the paver. No hanging back waiting for the mix to cool. You may not

> have any problems with compaction. If you do it will either be that the mix

> is tender or that density will be hard to get.

>

> Tender has shown up in some mixes. It appears during the middle of

> compaction when temperatures are 250 to 225 F. If the tenderness is not too

> severe the best solution is to hold off rolling during the tender

> temperature range. If it is severe call back.

>

> Density can be hard to achieve if lift thicknesses are too thin. Florida

> has found that mixes were permeable when laid at the same thickness as the

> old Marshall mixes. Moving to 4 time nominal maximum size greatly eases

> compaction.

>

> I think that should be the main things to look out for. As I said, write

> back if something comes up.

>

> Gerry Huber

> Heritage Research Group

> 317 390 3141 tel

> 317 486 5095 fax

> ----------

> From:

> To: Gerald Huber; superpave

> Subject: Construction Advice

> Date: Wednesday, January 01, 1997 12:19PM

>

> From:

> Date: Fri, Aug 22, 1997 12:19 PM

> Subject: Construction Advice

> To: Gerald Huber; superpave

> I serve as a Project Engineer for the Mississippi DOT and am about to start

> an overlay which will be the first SUPERPAVE project that my office has

> been associated with. What advice can anyone give me that I could use as

> Project Engineer and that would be helpful to the personnel from my office

> who will be on the road. An help will be appreciated.

>

> William O'Reilly

>

> Work email:

> Home email:

>

> From: "William O'Reilly" <>

> To: <>

> Subject: Construction Advice

>

> ----------

Would these guidelines hold also for polymer modified asphalts(PMA)? Are

mixing and compaction the same as for unmodified AC's despite the

non-newtonian properties of the PMA's?

Thanks for your comments.

Delmar Salomon

Idaho Asphalt Supply, Inc.

Date: Wed, 27 Aug 1997 09:03:06 -0400

From: Chris Blades <>

To:

Subject: Re: Construction Advice

William O'Reilly wrote:

>

> I serve as a Project Engineer for the Mississippi DOT and am about to start

> an overlay which will be the first SUPERPAVE project that my office has

> been associated with. What advice can anyone give me that I could use as

> Project Engineer and that would be helpful to the personnel from my office

> who will be on the road. An help will be appreciated.

>

> William O'Reilly

>

> Work email:

> Home email:

I have completed a few Superpave projects in NY as bothe a producer and

a contractor. They have been low to med. ESAL projects (<10 mil).

Compaction is more difficult to achieve than our standard Marshall Mixes

but with enough effort and care can be done. We found that a heavy

breakdown roller (16 ton double drum vib.) achieved most of the desired

density after its pass. We could achieve density after the second roller

but in order to keep the paving train consistantly moving we needed

three rollers. The last roller took out roller creases and brought up

any areas that needed additional density. (Monitoring by Nuc Gauge)

The mix can tend to shove and move quite a bit at times. This usually

does not occur with the first roller but can show up with the second. It

can move 3 to 4 inches. (I have some slides where I painted lines on the

mat to show how much it moves) This probably happens at a certain temp.

range but we did not keep track of it. (next Job!)

We used a pneumatic roller as the intermediate roller and this seemed

to put the material in place with out shoving it. The density tests

however showed no difference in the final densities.

If you have more specific questions let me know.

Christopher Blades

A. L. Blades and Sons

7610 Co. Rt. 65

Hornell NY 14843

607-324-3636

607-324-0998 FAX

Date: Fri, 29 Aug 1997 14:24:00 -0500

From:

To:

Cc:

Subject: RE: Superpave Construction Advice

Concerning advice for the upcoming Superpave in Mississippi, I gathered

the following information for Michael Prather, Koch Materials Company,

Terre Haute, IN.

"Performance Graded asphalt binders may or may not be equivalent to

viscosity graded asphalts. Where there is not a great difference

between the high and low PG temperatures, straight-run asphalts meet the

specifications, and will exhibit the same behavior as their equivalent

viscosity and penetration graded asphalts."

"Some Indiana Superpave mixtures (a modified Superpave PG asphalt cement

in a mixture designed using the Superpave Gyratory Compactor, SGC) have

a 0.2% higher asphalt content than a conventional mixture (viscosity

graded asphalt in a Marshall design). There are several reasons for the

higher asphalt content. The rheology of the modified asphalt allows a

thicker film of binder on the aggregate surface, therefore requiring

more asphalt. The kneading action of the gyratory compactor also

orients the aggregates within the specimen differently than the Marshall

hammer."

"Using conventional guidelines for mix and compaction temperatures based

upon laboratory viscosity measurements generally results in

recommendations that are well above optimum temperatures for field

construction when using elastomer-modified asphalts."

Best of luck on your first Superpave project. I'm sure that you and

the driving public will enjoy the finished product.

-----------------------------------------

Phil Blankenship

Koch Materials Company

PO Box 1875

Wichita, KS 67201

Voice (316) 828-8495

Fax (316) 828-7385

-----------------------------------------

----------

William O'Reilly wrote:

>

> I serve as a Project Engineer for the Mississippi DOT and am about to

start

> an overlay which will be the first SUPERPAVE project that my office

has

> been associated with. What advice can anyone give me that I could use

as

> Project Engineer and that would be helpful to the personnel from my

office

> who will be on the road. An help will be appreciated.

>

> William O'Reilly

Date: Sun, 31 Aug 1997 19:56:05 -0500

From: MARSHA RAY <>

To:

Subject: RE: Superpave Construction Advice

At 02:24 PM 8/29/97 -0500, you wrote:

>Concerning advice for the upcoming Superpave in Mississippi, I gathered

>the following information for Michael Prather, Koch Materials Company,

>Terre Haute, IN.

>

>"Performance Graded asphalt binders may or may not be equivalent to

>viscosity graded asphalts. Where there is not a great difference

>between the high and low PG temperatures, straight-run asphalts meet the

>specifications, and will exhibit the same behavior as their equivalent

>viscosity and penetration graded asphalts."

>

>"Some Indiana Superpave mixtures (a modified Superpave PG asphalt cement

>in a mixture designed using the Superpave Gyratory Compactor, SGC) have

>a 0.2% higher asphalt content than a conventional mixture (viscosity

>graded asphalt in a Marshall design). There are several reasons for the

>higher asphalt content. The rheology of the modified asphalt allows a

>thicker film of binder on the aggregate surface, therefore requiring

>more asphalt. The kneading action of the gyratory compactor also

>orients the aggregates within the specimen differently than the Marshall

>hammer."

>

>"Using conventional guidelines for mix and compaction temperatures based

>upon laboratory viscosity measurements generally results in

>recommendations that are well above optimum temperatures for field

>construction when using elastomer-modified asphalts."

>

>Best of luck on your first Superpave project. I'm sure that you and

>the driving public will enjoy the finished product.

> -----------------------------------------

>Phil Blankenship

>Koch Materials Company

>PO Box 1875

>Wichita, KS 67201

>Voice (316) 828-8495

>Fax (316) 828-7385

>

> -----------------------------------------

> ----------

>William O'Reilly wrote:

>>

>> I serve as a Project Engineer for the Mississippi DOT and am about to

>start

>> an overlay which will be the first SUPERPAVE project that my office

>has

>> been associated with. What advice can anyone give me that I could use

>as

>> Project Engineer and that would be helpful to the personnel from my

>office

>> who will be on the road. An help will be appreciated.

>>

>> William O'Reilly

>

>Please don't send us any more mail. You have an incorrect address. Thanks

Date: Sun, 31 Aug 1997 20:01:58 -0500

From: MARSHA RAY <>

To:

Subject: RE: Superpave Construction Advice

At 02:24 PM 8/29/97 -0500, you wrote:

>Concerning advice for the upcoming Superpave in Mississippi, I gathered

>the following information for Michael Prather, Koch Materials Company,

>Terre Haute, IN.

>

>"Performance Graded asphalt binders may or may not be equivalent to

>viscosity graded asphalts. Where there is not a great difference

>between the high and low PG temperatures, straight-run asphalts meet the

>specifications, and will exhibit the same behavior as their equivalent

>viscosity and penetration graded asphalts."

>

>"Some Indiana Superpave mixtures (a modified Superpave PG asphalt cement

>in a mixture designed using the Superpave Gyratory Compactor, SGC) have

>a 0.2% higher asphalt content than a conventional mixture (viscosity