قراءة كتاب American Rural Highways

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American Rural Highways

American Rural Highways

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Transcriber's Note

Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as possible, including obsolete and variant spellings and other inconsistencies. Text that has been changed to correct an obvious error is noted at the end of this ebook.

AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING SERIES

E. B. McCORMICK, Consulting Editor

FORMERLY DEAN OF ENGINEERING DIVISION
KANSAS STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE


AMERICAN
RURAL HIGHWAYS



McGraw-Hill Book Co. Inc.

PUBLISHERS OF BOOKS FOR

Coal Age — Electric Railway Journal
Electrical World — Engineering News-Record
American Machinist — Ingenieria Internacional
Engineering & Mining Journal — Power
Chemical & Metallurgical Engineering
Electrical Merchandising

FrontispieceFrontispiece

AMERICAN
RURAL HIGHWAYS


BY

T. R. AGG, C.E.

PROFESSOR OF HIGHWAY ENGINEERING
IOWA STATE COLLEGE


First Edition


McGRAW-HILL BOOK COMPANY, Inc.

NEW YORK: 239 WEST 39TH STREET

LONDON: 6 & 8 BOUVERIE ST., E. C. 4

1920


COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY THE
McGRAW-HILL BOOK COMPANY, INC.

PREFACE

American Rural Highways was written for use as a text or reference in courses dealing with rural highways and intended for agricultural engineers, students in agriculture and for short courses and extension courses. The reader is assumed to have familiarity with drawing and surveying, but the text is adapted primarily for students who do not receive training along the lines of the usual course in Highway or Civil Engineering.

The text is intended to familiarize the student with the relation of highway improvement to national progress, to indicate the various problems of highway administration and to set forth the usual methods of design and construction for rural highways in sufficient detail to establish a clear understanding of the distinguishing characteristics and relative serviceability of each of the common types of roadway surface.

Experience with classes made up of students in agriculture or agricultural engineering and with trade school students in road making served as a guide in the selection and arrangement of the material. Detailed discussion of tests of materials and of the theory of design has to a considerable extent been eliminated as being outside of the scope of the course for which the text is intended.

In the preparation of American Rural Highways reference was had to many books on highway subjects and to current periodical literature. Wherever direct extracts were made from such source, appropriate acknowledgment appears in the text.

T. R. Agg

Ames, Iowa
August 18, 1920.


CONTENTS

Preface

vii

Chapter I

THE PURPOSE AND UTILITY OF HIGHWAYS

Transportation Problem—National in Scope—Development in Traffic—Location or Farm to Market Traffic—Farm to Farm Traffic—Inter-City Traffic—Inter-County and Inter-State Traffic—Rural Education—Rural Social Life—Good Roads and Commerce

1-12

Chapter II

HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION

Township Administration—County Administration—State Administration—Federal Administration—Special Assessments—Zone Method of Assessing—General Taxation—Vehicle Taxes—Sinking Fund Bonds—Annuity Bonds—Serial Bonds—Comparison of Methods of Issuing Bonds—Desirability of Road Bonds

13-28

Chapter III

DRAINAGE OF ROADS

The Necessity for Drainage—Importance of Design—Surface Drainage—Run-off—Ordinary Design of Ditches—Underground Water—Tile Drains—Lying Tile—Culverts—Length of Culvert—Farm Entrance Culverts—Metal Pipe—Clay and Cement Concrete Pipe—Concrete Pipe—Endwalls for Culverts—Reinforced Concrete Box Culverts—Drop Inlet Culverts

29-41

Chapter IV

ROAD DESIGN

Necessity for Planning—Road Plans—Problems of Design—Preliminary Investigations—Road Surveys—Alignment—Intersections—Superelevation—Tractive Resistance—Rolling Resistance—Internal Resistance—Air Resistance—Effect of Trades—Energy Loss on Account of Grades—Undulating Roads—Guard Railing—Width of Roadway—Cross Section—Control of Erosion—Private Entrances—Æsthetics

42-62

Chapter V

EARTH ROADS

Variations in Soils—Variation in Rainfall—Cross Sections Elevating Grader—Maney Grader—Slip Scraper—Fresno Scraper—Elevating Grader Work—Use of Blade Grader—Costs—Maintenance—Value of Earth Roads

63-73

Chapter VI

SAND-CLAY AND GRAVEL ROADS

The Binder—Top-soil or Natural Mixtures—Sand-clay on Sandy Roads—Sand-clay on Clay or Loam—Characteristics—Natural Gravel—The Ideal Road Gravel—Permissible Size of Pebbles—Wearing Properties—Utilizing Natural Gravels—Thickness of Layer—Preparation of the Road—Trench Method—Surface Method—Maintenance

74-88

Chapter VII

BROKEN STONE ROAD SURFACES

Design—Properties of the Stone—Kinds of Rocks used

Pages