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Transport
Mix transport involves everything required to convey HMA from
a production facility to a paving site including truck
loading, weighing and ticketing, hauling to the paving site, dumping of the mix
into the paver or material transfer vehicle hopper, and truck return to the HMA
production facility (Roberts et al., 1996). Ideally, the goal of mix
transport should be to maintain mix characteristics between the production
facility and the paving site.
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| Figure 1: End Dump Truck |
Figure 2: Bottom Dump Truck |
There are three basic truck types used for mix transport
classified by their respective HMA discharge methods:
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End dump. End dump trucks unload their payload
by raising the front end and letting the payload slide down the bottom of the
bed and out the back through a tailgate (see Figure 1 and Video 1). They are the most
popular transport vehicle type because they are plentiful, maneuverable and
versatile.
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Bottom dump (or belly dump). Bottom dump trucks (see Figure
2 and Video 2) unload their payload by opening gates
on the bottom of the bed. Internal bed walls are sloped to direct the
entire payload out through the opened gates. Discharge rates can be controlled by
the degree of gate opening and the discharge is usually placed in an elongated
pile, called a windrow, in front of the paver by driving the truck forward
during discharge. Windrows require a
special MTV to feed the HMA into the paver.
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Live bottom (or flo-boy). Live bottom dump trucks (see Figure
3) have a conveyor
system at the bottom of their bed to unload their payload. HMA is
discharged out the back of the bed without raising the bed. Live bottom
trucks are more expensive to use and maintain because of the conveyor system but
they also can reduce segregation problems and
can eliminate some detrimental types of truck bed – paver contact (because the bed is not
raised during discharge).

Figure 3: Live Bottom Truck
There are several mix transport considerations, or best
practices, that are essential to maintaining HMA characteristics between the
production facility and the paving site. These considerations can generally be placed into
four categories:
- Loading at the Production Facility. Truck beds should be clean and lubricated
with non-petroleum products to prevent the HMA from sticking to the truck bed.
Petroleum based products, such as diesel
fuel, should not be used because of environmental issues and because they tend
to break down the asphalt binder. HMA should
be discharged into the truck bed so as to minimize segregation. Dropping HMA from the
storage silo or batcher (for batch plants) in one large mass creates a single
pile of HMA in the truck bed. Large-sized aggregate
may roll off this pile and collect around the base. Dropping HMA in several smaller masses (three
is typical) at different points in the truck bed will help minimize the
segregation risk.
- Truck transport. Truck transport
affects HMA characteristics through
cooling. HMA is usually loaded into a
truck at a fairly uniform temperature between 250°F to 350°F.
During transport, heat is transferred to the
surrounding environment and HMA temperature
drops.
However, cool HMA provides
excellent insulation and thus transported HMA tends to develop a cool thin crust
on the surface that surrounds a much hotter core. Things such as air temperature, rain, wind
and length of haul, insulated truck beds and truck tarps can affect the characteristics and temperature of this
crust.
- Unloading at the paving site. HMA should be unloaded soon
after it arrives at the paving site in order to minimize mix cooling.
Also, on jobs with more than one mix type the inspector and/or foreman
should be certain the correct mix is loaded into the paver.
- Operation synchronization. Truck transport should be planned such that the HMA transport
rate (expressed in tons/hr) closely matches plant production rate and laydown
rate. Traffic affects HMA delivery rates because it
affects truck speed. Especially in
congested urban areas, heavy and/or unpredictable traffic may substantially
increase, or at least vary, truck travel time. As truck travel time increases, more trucks are needed to provide a given HMA delivery rate. Therefore, as
traffic gets worse, trucking costs increase. Additionally, the unpredictability of traffic may result in either long
paver idle times while waiting for the next truckload of HMA or large truck
backups as several trucks all reach the paving site or production facility at
the same time.
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