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Home / Publications / Catalog Search / Relationship of Vehicle Paths to Highway Curve Design

Relationship of Vehicle Paths to Highway Curve Design

Full-Text PDF

Author(s):

J.C. Glennon, G.D. Weaver

Publication Date

May 1971

Abstract

Current design practice for horizontal curves assumes that vehicles follow the path of the highway curve with geometric exactness. To examine the adequacy of this assumption, photographic field studies were conducted of vehicle maneuvers on highway curves.|Results of the field studies indicate that most vehicle paths, regardless of speed, exceed the degree of highway curve at some point on the curve. For example, on a 3-degree highway curve, 10 percent of the vehicles can be expected to exceed 4.3 degrees.|A new design approach is proposed. This approach is dependent upon selecting: (1) an appropriate vehicle path percentile relation, (2) a reasonable safety margin to account for unexplained variables that may either raise the lateral force demand or lower the available skid resistance, and (3) a minimum skid resistance versus speed relationship that the highway department will provide on all pavements.

Report Number:

134-5

Link(s):

Document/Product

http://tti.tamu.edu/documents/134-5.pdf

Publication/Product Request

TTI reports and products are available for download at no charge. If an electronic version is not available and no instructions on how to obtain it are given, contact the TTI Library.

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