The Location, Construction and Maintenance of RoadsD. Van Nostrand, 1918 - 226 pages |
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Page 2
... built a mile of road on a section line , which crossed the same stream three times . By adopting a somewhat different location and making the road 1 miles long , the stream would be crossed but once and the road become of greater ...
... built a mile of road on a section line , which crossed the same stream three times . By adopting a somewhat different location and making the road 1 miles long , the stream would be crossed but once and the road become of greater ...
Page 4
... built and the nature of the country . Less detail is necessary for an earth road in a flat country than a brick road in a hilly district , for example , but enough should be obtained to make sure that the final location is along the ...
... built and the nature of the country . Less detail is necessary for an earth road in a flat country than a brick road in a hilly district , for example , but enough should be obtained to make sure that the final location is along the ...
Page 9
... built on roads used by numer- ous automobiles at high speed are almost as dangerous as the grade crossings they replace . Attention is therefore being given more and more to comprehensive relocation as a means of re- ducing the number ...
... built on roads used by numer- ous automobiles at high speed are almost as dangerous as the grade crossings they replace . Attention is therefore being given more and more to comprehensive relocation as a means of re- ducing the number ...
Page 20
... built by filling in stone to a depth of 4 feet , with an open box culvert at the bottom to carry whatever water might penetrate beneath the road from the sides . This stone fill extended the entire width of the road , from shoulder to ...
... built by filling in stone to a depth of 4 feet , with an open box culvert at the bottom to carry whatever water might penetrate beneath the road from the sides . This stone fill extended the entire width of the road , from shoulder to ...
Page 21
... built by constructing the embankment of material dredged from a drainage ditch on the upper side of the road and a smaller ditch on the lower side . When the swamps have soundings of 2 to 5 feet , he considers that the elevation of the ...
... built by constructing the embankment of material dredged from a drainage ditch on the upper side of the road and a smaller ditch on the lower side . When the swamps have soundings of 2 to 5 feet , he considers that the elevation of the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abrasion aggregate amount application asphalt average base line binder bituminous bituminous material bonds bottom course bricks broken stone cents cents cents clay coefficient of wear concrete roads construction cost cubic foot cubic yard culverts curb cushion depth desirable distillation drag drain drainage earth roads edges embankment engineers feet filled filler finished French coefficient gallon gilsonite gneiss grade Grahamite gravel gravel roads grout hard hauled heated heavy highway department hydrocarbons Illinois improvements inches joints KOEHRING laid less macadam macadam road mastic metamorphic rocks method miles mineral mixed mixer mixture naphtha obtained paraffin pavement paving petroleum placed Portland Cement pounds properties Public Roads residuum road oils roadbed roadway rock roller rolling sand schists screenings shoulders shovel side ditches sieve slope soft specific gravity square yard subgrade temperature templet thickness top course traffic trench usually viscosity wearing course width
Popular passages
Page 198 - Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey "New Mexico New York...
Page 107 - The cement shall not develop initial set in less than 45 minutes when the Vicat needle is used or 60 minutes when the Gillmore needle is used. Final set shall be attained within 10 hours.
Page 108 - The cement shall be stored in such a manner as to permit easy access for proper inspection and identification of each shipment.
Page 117 - Mixtures of native or pyrogenous hydrocarbons and their non-metallic derivatives, which may be gases, liquids, viscous liquids, or solids, and which are soluble in carbon disulphide.
Page 107 - The specific gravity of cement shall not be less than 3.10. Should the test of cement as received fall below this requirement, a second test may be made upon a sample ignited at a low red heat. The loss in weight of the ignited cement shall not exceed 4 per cent.
Page 108 - The cement shall be delivered in suitable bags or barrels with the brand and name of the manufacturer plainly marked thereon, unless shipped in bulk. A bag shall contain 94 Ib. net. A barrel shall contain 376 Ib.
Page 107 - Portland cement is the product obtained by finely pulverizing clinker produced by calcining to incipient fusion an intimate and properly proportioned mixture of argillaceous and calcareous materials, with no additions subsequent to calcination excepting water and calcined or uncalcined gypsum.
Page 117 - ... the application of heat, and which consist of a mixture of hydrocarbons and their derivatives of complex structure, largely cyclic and bridge compounds.
Page 110 - Healdton grade for example, it exists in a form requiring special treatment for its elimination. Oils from the Gulf Field are characterized by relatively high percentages of asphalt and low percentages of the lighter gravity distillation products. Considerable sulphur is present, much of which, however, is in the form of sulphureted hydrogen, and is easily removed by steam before refining or utilizing the oil as fuel. Oils from Wyoming and Colorado are in the main of paraffin base, suitable for refining...
Page 108 - Packages varying more than 5 per cent from the specified weight may be rejected; and if the average weight of packages in any shipment, as shown by weighing 50 packages at random, is less than that specified, the entire shipment may be rejected.