Soil Tracking Paint Test, MLR-89-13, 1989


Autoria(s): Desconhecido
Data(s)

01/11/1989

Resumo

A new paint testing device was built to determine the resistance of paints to darkening due to road grime being tracked onto them. The device consists of a tire rotating on a sample drum. Soil was applied to the tire and then tracked onto paint samples which were attached to the drum. A colorimeter was used to measure the lightness of the paints after being tracked. Lightness is measured from 0 (absolute black) to 100 (absolute white). Four experiments were run to determine the optimum time length to track a sample, the reproducibility, the effects of different soils, and the maximum acceptable level for darkening of a paint. The following conclusions were reached: 1) the optimum tracking time was 10 minutes; 2) the reproducibility had a standard deviation of 1.5 lightness units; 3) different soils did not have a large effect on the amount of darkening on the paints; 4) a maximum acceptable darkness could not be established based on the limited amount of data; and 5) a correlation exists between the paints which were darkening in the field and the paints which were turning the darkest on the tracking wheel.

Formato

pdf

Identificador

http://publications.iowa.gov/17173/1/IADOT_mlr8913_Soil_Track_Pnt_Test_1989.pdf

(1989) Soil Tracking Paint Test, MLR-89-13, 1989. Transportation, Department of

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://publications.iowa.gov/17173/

Palavras-Chave #Pavements #Transportation #Materials #Roads and highways #Research
Tipo

Departmental Report

NonPeerReviewed