ASPHALT PAVING BASIC INFORMATION AND TUTORIALS


The asphalt paving required on the project is generally subcontracted to someone specializing in paving. The general contractor’s estimator will make an estimate to check the subcontractor’s price.

Asphalt paving will most commonly be hot-mix and is generally classified by traffic (heavy, medium, or light) and use (walks, courts, streets, driveways, etc.).

The estimator will be concerned with subgrade preparation, subdrains, soil sterilization, insulation course, subbase course, base courses, prime and tack coats, and the asphalt paving required.Not all items are required on any given project, so the estimator should determine which items will be required, the material and equipment necessary for each portion of the work, and the requisite thickness and amount of compaction.

Specifications.
Check the requirements for compaction, thickness of layers, total thicknesses, and materials required for each portion of the work. The drawings will also have to be checked for some of these items.

The drawings will show the location of most of the work to be completed, but the specifications should also be checked. The specifications and drawings will list different requirements for the various uses. (These are called traffic requirements.)

Estimate.
The number of square feet (or square yards) of surface area to be covered is determined, and the thickness (compacted) of each course and the type of materials required are noted. Base courses and the asphalt paving are often taken off by the ton, as this is the unit in which these materials must be bought.

The type of asphalt and aggregate size required must also be noted. Two layers of asphalt paving are required on some projects: A coarse base mix may be used with a fine topping mix. Equipment required may include a steel-wheel roller, trailers to transport equipment, dump trucks, paving machines, and various small tools.

To estimate the tons of material required per 1,000 sf of surface area, refer to Figure 9.44. Different requirements will be listed for the various uses (walk, driveway, etc.), and the different spaces must be kept separately.

In many climates, the asphalt paving has a cutoff date in cold weather, and the paving that is not placed when the mixing plants shut down will not be laid until the start-up time in the spring. The plants may be shut down for as long as four months or more, depending on the locale.

FIGURE 9.44. Approximate Asphalt Paving Materials Tonnage.

EXCAVATION CALCULATION BASIC INFORMATION AND TUTORIALS


Excavation is measured by the cubic yard for the quantity takeoff (27 cf # 1 cy). Before excavation, when the soil is in an undisturbed condition, it weighs about 100 pounds per cf; rock weighs about 150 pounds per cf.

The site plan is the key drawing for determining earthwork requirements and is typically scaled in feet and decimals of a foot. There is usually no reason to change to units of feet and inches; however, at times they must be changed to decimals. Remember that when estimating quantities, the computations need not be worked out to an exact answer.

Swell and Compaction.
Material in its natural state is referred to as bank materials and is measured in bank cubic yards (bcy). When bank materials are excavated, the earth and rocks are disturbed and begin to swell.

This expansion causes the soil to assume a larger volume; this expansion represents the amount of swell and is generally expressed as a percentage gained above the original volume.

Uncompacted excavated materials are referred to as loose materials and are measured in loose cubic yards (lcy).When loose materials are placed and compacted (as fill) on a project, it will be compressed into a smaller volume than when it was loose, and with the exception of solid rock it will occupy less volume than in its bank condition.

This reduction in volume is referred to as shrinkage. Shrinkage is expressed as a percentage of the undisturbed original or bank volume.

Materials that have been placed and compacted are referred to as compacted materials and are measured in compacted cubic yards (ccy). Bank, loose, and compacted cubic yards are used to designate which volume we are talking about.

Figure 9.1 is a table of common swell and shrinkage factors for various types of soils. When possible tests should be performed to determine the actual swell and shrinkage for the material.

FIGURE 9.1. Swell and Shrinkage Factors. (Solid rock when compacted is less dense than its bank condition.)

electrical engineering tutorials