User:Fephisto/Bridge Inspection
A bridge inspection is the visual examination and testing of a bridge in order to determine whether it needs further repairs, maintenance, retrofitting, or should be condemned. It is an important component of mitigating the risks of a bridge failure.
Elements
[edit]A detailed inspection will often involve inspection of:
- Stream Channels
- Decks
- Slab coverings
- Railings
- Superstructure
- Girders
- Stringers
- Beams
- Trusses
- Cables
- Pins
- Plates
- Bearings
- Substructure
- Columns
- Towers
- Trestles
- Abutements
- Walls
- Footings
- Piles
- Caps
- Culverts
- Joints
- Seals
- Coatings
- Sidewalks
- Curbs
- Drains
Many of these elements have particular elements to consider.[1]
Stream Channel
[edit]Water erosion is an important primary cause of bridge degradation, and therefore, an inspection must take into account the every changing hydraulics of any stream or water source that a bridge is crossing. In particularly, one aspect is scouring, where fast moving water about a pier or abutement causes the sediment to be picked up from about the abutement, thereby reducing the structural integrity of the member.
A secondary effect could be direct erosion of the member itself. For example, often high floods will bring disproportionate pressures, forces, and/or debris to directly impugn on a structural member (as in the Chunky Creek train wreck) causing it to break directly.
TODO: incorporate some sources from 29CFR here. TODO: incorporate some stuff from AASHTO here. TODO: make sure the following is in this article:
- Concrete degradation
- Metal pitting
- Rebar degradation
- ^ New York State DOT Bridge Inspection Manual (PDF). State of New York. 2017.