ACtrafficengr
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 5, 2002
- 1,641
An equipment operator managed to clip bridge rail mounting bolts on a new precast headwall with his bucket. One was sheared off at the base, one has cracks at the base, and another was bent 10 degrees. These are 1" (25 mm) bolts threaded into a plate and cast into the concrete.
The contractor hired an engineer to design a repair. His suggestion is to core around the broken and cracked ones, double nut them, and try to back them out with an impact wrench so they can be replaced. Failing that, use a coupler nut to attach a new section of bolt. Then fill the core hole around the bolts with non-shrink grout.
He recommends heat-straightening ("not beyond cherry-red") the bent one and repairing the galvanizing with ZRC.
Speed limit is 55 mph, and AADT is ~100. The rail is NYSDOT standard 3-rail box beam bridge rail.
Does this sound reasonable?
The contractor hired an engineer to design a repair. His suggestion is to core around the broken and cracked ones, double nut them, and try to back them out with an impact wrench so they can be replaced. Failing that, use a coupler nut to attach a new section of bolt. Then fill the core hole around the bolts with non-shrink grout.
He recommends heat-straightening ("not beyond cherry-red") the bent one and repairing the galvanizing with ZRC.
Speed limit is 55 mph, and AADT is ~100. The rail is NYSDOT standard 3-rail box beam bridge rail.
Does this sound reasonable?