Rolling Straight-edge
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The rolling straight-edge (also rolling straightedge or planograph) is an instrument used to measure the surface regularity of roads and similar structures such as airport runways. It consists of a
straightedge A straightedge or straight edge is a tool used for drawing straight lines, or checking their straightness. If it has equally spaced markings along its length, it is usually called a ruler. Straightedges are used in the automotive service and ma ...
of a fixed distance mounted on wheels with a sensor at the centrepoint measuring deviation in height. It is rolled along the road surface and set to specific trigger levels which can be logged automatically or by means of an audible alarm. The rolling straight-edge was developed by the British
Road Research Laboratory TRL Limited, trading as TRL (formerly Transport Research Laboratory) is an independent private company offering a transport consultancy and research service to the public and private sector. Originally established in 1933 by the UK Government a ...
to replace earlier manual methods of measurement using rulers. It has been used by several countries and remains in use in the United Kingdom, Germany and Taiwan.


Description

The rolling straight-edge is a piece of equipment used to measure the surface regularity of roads and similar structures, such as airport runways. The equipment consists of a long beam (the straight edge) mounted on wheels with a measuring wheel at the midpoint. The measuring wheel moves up and down according to depressions in the road surface, a sensor measures the vertical movement, which is recorded on a graduated scale. The equipment is rolled longitudinally down the surface being measured. The equipment can be fitted with a bell or buzzer that alerts the user when a set limit of vertical deviation is breached. The recording of data, typically
chainage The chain is a unit of length equal to 66 feet (22 yards). It is subdivided into 100 links (PDF) or 4 rods. There are 10 chains in a furlong, and 80 chains in one statute mile. In metric terms, it is 20.1168 m long. By extension, chainage ( ...
and magnitude or number of deviations, can be done by hand, though some units contain automated dataloggers. A smoothness index for the road can be derived from a standard deviation analysis of the results. As an example of a unit the
Road Research Laboratory TRL Limited, trading as TRL (formerly Transport Research Laboratory) is an independent private company offering a transport consultancy and research service to the public and private sector. Originally established in 1933 by the UK Government a ...
rolling straight-edge measures in length with the sensor mounted at the midpoint. The unit was mounted on forty diameter road wheels mounted in pairs apart. The whole unit is dismantlable into three parts for transport and the frame was made of glass fibre. it was designed to be pulled along the road by hand at a slow walking pace, approximately .


History

The rolling straight-edge is one of the earliest methods of measuring surface regularity. It was a development of an earlier technique of measuring road depressions manually with a ruler under a straight-edge. This method had later been developed by the British
Department of Transport The Department for Transport (DfT) is a department of His Majesty's Government responsible for the English transport network and a limited number of transport matters in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland that have not been devolved. The d ...
with the use of graduated wedges which were pushed under the ruler to measure the height, but remained a slow and cumbersome technique. The government's Road Research Laboratory developed the rolling straight-edge as a quicker method. The original design only had wheels at either end of the straight edge but this proved liable to error from small bumps so additional wheels were added. The current British practice as set out in its national standards, the Specification for Highway Works, is for the rolling straight-edge to be used for checking surface regularity of all sections of road longer than in length. The manual graduated wedge method is retained for use on shorter sections of road or where the rolling straight-edge proves impractical to use. The specification sets out the number of deviations greater than and greater than that are permitted per section of carriageway. The specification allows for two levels of tolerance, for category A roads and category B roads, with the client specifying which is to be used. Twice as many deviations are permitted on category B roads. No deviation greater than is permitted. In the United States rolling straight-edges have previously featured in some state highways specifications. Devices as long as and have also been used. The
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (also known as NASEM or the National Academies) are the collective scientific national academy of the United States. The name is used interchangeably in two senses: (1) as an umbrell ...
's journal ''
Transportation Research Record The Transportation Research Board (TRB) is a division of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, formerly the National Research Council of the United States, which serves as an independent adviser to the President of the Unite ...
'' in 1996 described the instruments as "cumbersome devices with limited production capability" and noted that they could miss deviations with a wavelength of half the length of the straight-edge, due to the fixed points of reference at either end. By 2001 36 US state departments of transport were specifying the use of profilographs to derive a profile index as a measure of surface regularity, rather than rolling straight-edges. The profilograph takes a series of laser measurements of the road surface along a defined track. The
Taiwan Area National Expressway Engineering Bureau The Taiwan Area National Expressway Engineering Bureau (TANEEB; ) was the organization under the Ministry of Transportation and Communications of the Republic of China in charge for the planning, land acquisition, bidding and construction of n ...
specification requires a rolling straight-edge as a means of measuring surface regularity. It specifies a maximum of of deviation over any length, but contractors have criticised this as being unachievable. In Germany the equipment, in use since 1960, is known as a planograph and a straight-edge with length is used.


References

{{reflist Pavement engineering Dimensional instruments