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HOTLINKS to download
PAVE reports, review upcoming NCAT
training courses, query
historical weather data, view
current color radar or preview
local forecast.
8,357,138 ESALs as of 2300 hours on August 9, 2007 (84% of the 10,000,000
ESAL goal !).
RUTTING is
being measured weekly with scanning lasers that are correlated to periodic dipstick
profiles. The average rut depth on 8/11/08
was 5.8 mm.
ROUGHNESS (via inertial profiler) within the middle 150 ft (research) portion
of each section most recently averaged 92 inches per mile.
CONTACT
this project via...
NCAT_Pavement_Test_Track
1600_Lee_Road_151 Opelika,_AL_36804_USA 334.844.6228

GOD BLESS AMERICA !
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Aerial of 309 Acre Site (Click here for Photo Album, or
Click Aerial to Select Web Camera)
 | WELCOME to the home page for the NCAT Pavement Test Track. The
primary objective of this site is to effectively communicate our experiences
to the world as we administer research designed to extend the life of flexible
pavements. Experimental mixes on our 1.7 mile oval (located about 30 minutes from the
campus of Auburn University) are installed in 200 ft
test sections that facilitate meaningful field performance comparisons, and laboratory
testing is conducted on samples made during construction to facilitate practical lab to
field performance correlations. We appreciate your interest and value your feedback.
While you are here, we would appreciate you taking the time to participate in a
brief web
survey that will help us to propose effective experiments for the 2009 Track.
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 | CONSTRUCTION - Reconstruction of the 2006
experiment was completed on October 19, 2006 by East Alabama Paving, who was selected as
the contractor via a competitive bidding process on 8/15/06. The third research
cycle again consists of extended traffic sections, new mix performance sections, and
instrumented structural sections (on the Track as well as on remote, open roadways).
The instrumented structural sections are part of a larger, multi-state validation effort
for mechanistic-empirical pavement design. Fleet operations began on November 10,
2006 after finish work (shoulders, striping, etc.) had been completed and the trucks were
ready to roll. Another 10 million ESALs is planned to be completed by the fall of
2008. The planning process is now underway for the fourth research cycle, which will
be built in 2009.
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 | INSTRUMENTATION - Multidepth temperature
thermister probes have been installed in all 46 sections on the Track. Paired with
data from an onsite automated weather station, these data are used to precisely
characterize the performance environment for each experimental section.
Additionally, the sections that make up the structural experiment have high speed
instrumentation arrays consisting of strain gauges and pressure plates installed at select
depths. Measurement data generated by these devices are used to quantify the
pavements' response to passing loads, which is useful in validating pavement analysis and design
methodologies that are mechanistically based. A wireless
mesh network has been deployed along the entire length of the Track to facilitate high speed data transfer in a safe and
efficient manner.
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 | TRUCKING - This type of research is known as accelerated
performance testing (APT) because we apply a design lifetime of truck traffic (typically
10 to 15 years) in 2 years. Over 3.3 million miles had been safely driven on the
NCAT Track by the end of 2005 in order to apply 20 million ESALs over 2 traffic
cycles. Trucking operations were completed for the 2003 Track on 12/17/05, and began
again in November of 2006 following the completion of reconstruction activities. An
AM driver shift runs from 5:00 AM until approximately 2:00 PM, and a PM driver shift runs
from 2:00 PM until approximately 11:00 PM. Each rig in the 5 truck fleet targets
running 680 miles per day in order to damage experimental pavements. Since all
sections are subjected to identical and precisely monitored levels of traffic, it is
possible to complete meaningful intrasponsor and intersponsor field performance
comparisons. Running so many miles in a controlled manner creates a great
opportunity to conduct heavy truck research, and we are working closely with the trucking
industry to meet their research needs in a manner that complements the work we do for the
paving industry. Select reports from the Program for Advanced Vehicle Evaluation
(PAVE) are available for download.
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 | FIELD PERFORMANCE - Every Monday, trucking is
suspended so that vehicle maintenance can be performed and pavement performance can be
quantified. An inertial profiler equipped with a full lane width dual scanning laser
"rutbar" is run weekly around the entire Track in order to determine individual
wheelpath roughness, right wheelpath macrotexture and individual wheelpath rutting for
every experimental section. Additionally, 3 random locations were selected within
each section in a stratified manner to serve as the fixed test location for nondestructive
wheelpath densities. Transverse profiles are measured along these same locations so
that rutting may be calculated using a contact method. Every month, wet ribbed
surface friction testing, falling weight deflectometer testing, and structural high speed
response data are collected, along with videologging to provide a permanent visual record
of surface performance. Every quarter, cores are cut from the wheelpath of every
section so that densification of each layer can be considered.
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 | LAB PERFORMANCE - To facilitate lab to field
performance correlations, numerous test specimens were compacted using actual plant run
material at the time test sections were constructed. Additionally, hundreds of
pounds of loose mix were sampled and saved during production of each experimental section
to facilitate other research projects that can be enhanced by being plugged into Track
research.
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 | COMMUNICATION - Representatives from each research
sponsor are onsite while test sections are being built in order to provide oversight and
ensure that as-built properties best meet their research needs. Meetings of the
entire sponsor group are hosted at the Track every 6 months thereafter in order to share
preliminary results and plan for the future. At each meeting, the first day consists
of classroom presentations and discussions, while the second day is spent on the Track
inspecting test sections. The last 6-month sponsor meeting was held on November 6
and 7, 2007. The next 6-month sponsor meeting is planned for August 26 and 27, 2008.
A Track
Symposium that will be open to non-sponsor participation is being planned for February
10th (8:00 AM) and 11th (noon), 2009. Many reports on Track research have
been published and are available for download.
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