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Title EVALUATION OF VEHICLE SPEEDS ON FREEWAY-TO-FREEWAY CONNECTOR RAMPS IN HOUSTON
Accession No 00982107
Authors Voigt, A P; Fenno, D W; Borchardt, D W
Period Covered 0109-0208
Corp. Authors
/ Publisher
Texas Transportation Institute information; Texas Department of Transportation information; Federal Highway Administration information
Publication Date   20030700
Description 102 p.; Appendices(1); Figures(10); Photos(7); References(23); Tables(7)
Languages English
Abstract This research project examined the speed characteristics of passenger cars and vehicles with high centers of gravity on freeway connectors to determine any discernable differences between the two vehicle types. Data to determine compliance with posted advisory speed limits and average speeds at points along connector ramps were collected on freeway connectors in Houston. Four different vehicles were driven through the curves at varying speeds while monitoring a manual ball-bank indicator as well as collecting lateral acceleration data electronically. The project determined that the general public often exceeds the posted advisory speed limits, often by more than 10 mph. While there are no seemingly discernable differences in lateral accelerations by different types of vehicles for a given speed along a curve, there may be a 5 to 10 mph difference in the driver's comfortable speed between vehicle types. The findings of this project indicate that there may be differences between the maximum comfortable speeds that drivers of heavy vehicles and passenger car type vehicles will accept for a freeway-to-freeway curve. The following conclusions confirmed by this project are applicable to freeway-to-freeway connectors and should be considered in their design, and especially in their re-design: to provide adequate deceleration and acceleration distances for tractor-trailers and other heavy vehicles, to reduce the side friction demand on trucks in the curve by developing superelevation more on the tangent, to place curve advisory speed signing with more regard to the deceleration needs of trucks. The results of this project indicate that modifying the current advisory speed setting criteria to use a 10-degree level to set a truck advisory speed and a 13-degree level for setting a more realistic passenger car advisory speed may be appropriate to more closely represent the 85th percentile speed of each vehicle on a curve.
Supplemental
Information
Research Project Title: Safe Speeds on Curves for Vehicles with High Centers of Gravity. Report Date: October 2002; Resubmitted: July 2003.
TRT Terms Automobiles information; Average travel speed information; Compliance information; Design information; Freeways information; Heavy vehicles information; Lateral acceleration information; Location information; Ramps (Interchanges) information; Speed limits information; Speed signs information; Superelevation information; Trucks information
Geographical Terms Houston (Texas)
Other Terms Acceleration distance; Advisory speeds; Deceleration distance
Subject Areas H54 OPERATIONS AND TRAFFIC CONTROL; I73 Traffic control; H55 TRAFFIC FLOW, CAPACITY AND MEASUREMENTS
Contract Number Project No. 0-4318
Report Number FHWA/TX-03/4318-1,; Research Report 4318-1,; TTI: 0-4318
Availability
National Technical Information Service information
TRIS Files HRIS
Database TRIS Online
TRIS is a bibliographic database funded by sponsors of the Transportation Research Board (TRB), primarily the state departments of transportation and selected federal transportation agencies. TRIS Online is hosted by the National Transportation Library under a cooperative agreement between the Bureau of Transportation Statistics and TRB.
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