This question is for anyone who knows about how our roads get paved (GZire?). I've been to places like Tokyo, Connecticut, and just came back from a vacation that saw us in Vancouver, B.C. and Seattle where temperatures and weather conditions vary much more than they do here but yet it seems like the roads that I encountered had few if any potholes or bad cracks. As a Mechanical Engineer, my intuition tells me that if road surfaces are exposed to more temperature extremes (not just temperature but also wet seasons / dry seasons), then roads should be in worse condition. I'm guessing the mechanisms involve expansion and contraction cycles, viscosity changes in the asphalt, and erosion from rain - but I don't know for sure. So why is it that the roads suck more here? Are we using the same compounds but are unable to maintain it enough? Or are we using cheaper compound?
I think you need to look at how the road was constructed, how it was designed, and how it is loaded in order to see what is going on.
A well constructed AC (asphaltic concrete) paving with a poor design and one that is overloaded may fail. A poorly constructed road with a poor design, but very low loading may mean that the road remains in service for a long time...........you guys understand what I'm getting at.
Anyhow...........means of failure. One of the common failure means in Hawaii has to due with loading and unloading the roads. In general a "pumping" type action occurs which leads to the decay/destruction of the roadway. Sometimes everything is built well, designed well, and loaded OK, but you can get water intrusion due to subsurface streams, etc. Another thing that can mess up the roadway is diesel spills..........diesel will kill the binder.
So.............sorry, but you kind of have to take each failure on its own to see if it's poor design, construction, overloading, or other that is leading to the road failure.
I remember that article too. Weird stuff, like the fact that the slow-setting asphalt perferred by Hawaii for patchwork is actually water soluble, effectively guaranteeing that potholes, once filled, will have to be filled again after the next heavy rain! Why does Hawaii prefer it? It doesn't set up in the back of the trucks if not used quickly.
We use cold patch to "patch" potholes. This is opposed to the hot mix asphalt that is used for new paving. Cold patch is meant to be a stop gap measure and is usually way under-compacted to stand up to the traffic abuse. One other item to consider is that the patch is doo-doo. It failed for a reason, so unless the subase is taken care of, the patch life will be less than if the base was suitable repaired.
I referred to a "pumping" action above. In essence what I mean by this is water gets into/underneath the patch. You load it with cars and increase the pressure. The tires leave the patch and the pressure decreases. This action works to break apart the cold patch.
The patch area is also usually not prepared well enough at the edges and the feathering is not typically something that stands up well to abuse.
Again as above..........these are generalities. You really need to look at each patch failure to see what's happening.