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Traffic Monitoring Guide Training Mini-Course. Instructors. Jeff Patten Phone (202) 366-5052 Email jeff.patten@fhwa.dot.gov Harshad Desai Phone (202) 366-5047 Email harshad.desai@fhwa.dot.gov David Jones Phone (202) 366-5051 Email david.jone@fhwa.dot.gov. Course Objectives .
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Instructors • Jeff Patten • Phone (202) 366-5052 • Email jeff.patten@fhwa.dot.gov • Harshad Desai • Phone (202) 366-5047 • Email harshad.desai@fhwa.dot.gov • David Jones • Phone (202) 366-5051 • Email david.jone@fhwa.dot.gov
Course Objectives • Define the structure of a traffic monitoring program • Describe the purpose and appropriate use of the TMG procedures • Use the procedures for obtaining data for Federal and State programs • Identify issues impacting data quality
Agenda • 8:00 Introduction • 8:45 Volume • 9:30 Break • 9:45 Classification • 10:15 Weight • 10:45 Summary • 11:00 Adjourn
Define the Structure • Main Components • Continuous counts • Short term counts • Special need counts • Design 4 C’s • Comprehensive • Cooperation • Coordination • Consistent
Weight data provides damage factors used for pavement design. WIM CLASSIFICATION 31 1. Axle & seasonal 245 2299 correction factors 2. K , D , & T factors COUNTS 1. Seasonal 5051 50 correction 48 Hr Volumes and Classification factors 2. K & D factors 48 Hr Volumes Short Term Counts Continuous Counts MONITORING SITES MONITORING SITES Traffic Data Types
Describe the Purpose and Appropriate Use of the TMG Procedures • Starting point • One size doesn’t fit all • Improve • Advance • Insure
Use the procedures for obtaining data for • Federal Programs • HPMS • TVT • LTPP & Truck and Weight Studies • State Programs • Planning • Design • Safety • Other data users
Identify issues impacting data quality • Quality Control “collection” • Quality Assurance “processing” • Action Plan
Traffic Monitoring System Regulation (TMS) • A traffic monitoring system means a systematic process for the collection, analysis, summary, and retention of highway and transit related person and vehicular traffic data. • 23 CFR Part 500 B See http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/legsregs/directives/fapg/cfr050b.htm • Operational October 1, 1997 • No Sanctions
TMS to be used when data: • are supplied to the U.S. DOT • are used in support of studies or systems which are the responsibility of the U.S. DOT • collection is supported by programs of the U.S. DOT • are used in the apportionment or allocation of Federal funds by the U.S. DOT • are used in the design or construction of an FHWA funded project; or • are required as part of a federally mandated program of the U.S. DOT.
TMS Extent of Application • Allpublic roadsexcept • Rural local • Urban local • Rural minor collector or • those that are federally owned • State's TMS applies to all data used for the enumerated purposes regardless of source, including: • local governments and • All other public or private entities
TMS Components • Shall meet precisions of HPMS • Continuous Counters sufficient to develop DOW, Seasonal, Axle, and Growth factors • Short Counts: • Adjusted to AADT • VC on NHS sufficient to provide (3-yr cycle) on major links: • Single Trailer Combo, Multi Trailer Combo, 2A4T,Buses, Total • Vehicle Occupancy for Auto, Light Trk, Bus
TMS Components - continued • Field Ops • Equipment Testing process and frequency • Document number, duration, cycle, temporal and spatial distribution • Retention of original data • Factoring Procedures • Use of month, DOW, Axle, Growth with factors reviewed annually and updated every 3 yrs • Process used to produce AADT will be documented
HPMS Field Manual Appendix F - Traffic Monitoring Procedures for HPMS • HPMS samples on 3 year cycle • All roads, not just state owned • Traffic counts on all roads on 6 year cycle – volume groups • 48 hour monitoring See http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ohim/hpmsmanl/hpms.htm
HPMS Field Manual • Appendix F - Continued • Continuous • At least one ATR on each PAS/NHS • At least 2 full days for each day of week for each month • Short Term • Random scheduled geographically and temporally • Use axle correction factors • Machine error factors not allowed
2001 Traffic Monitoring Guide • Objectives • Support HPMS • Improve quality of truck information • Describe “good practice” • Provide flexibility
Data Collection Framework • All program elements (volume, class, and weight) require • Continuous traffic counts (CTR, ATR, PTR…) • Short term counts • Special counts
Short Term Traffic Counts Traffic Adjustment Data Sources Permanent Permanent Portable Portable Portable Continuous Continuous Seasonal Axle Vehicle Counts Classification & Classification Counters Counters Weigh-in-Motion (Four Seasons) Counts Traffic Counts Traffic Average Traffic Classification Classifications Counts (Four Seasons) Actual AADT, K & D Apply Axle Traffic Correction Axle Correction Factors Factors Adjustment Factors Percent Trucks T Assign Seasonal Apply Seasonal Factors Volume Factors Assign Transportation Statistics Office Estimated District
2001 TMG -continued • Traffic Monitoring Program Elements • Traffic Volume • Vehicle Classification • Truck Weight
2001 TMG -continued • Initial Classification Goal: • 25 - 30 % of all counts [volume+class] be classification counts • At least one classification count per “road” • Supports a factoring approach that accounts for truck variability, not just volume variability • Length Classification
2001 TMG -continued • Each “road” should have accurate reliable truck weight information • Gross vehicle weights • Axle weight distributions • Load Spectra • Truck volumes • Truck Groups
2001 Traffic Monitoring Guide • Key Points • Partnerships with data users • Emphasis on truck volumes • Factor truck counts • Use other data sources • Truck data – New Pavement Design Guide
AASHTO Guidelines1992 • Major objectives and principles • Improve the quality of State and national traffic data • Move toward standardization of traffic data procedures • The concept of truth-in-data
AASHTO Recommendations • Data collection needs • Field equipment • Data editing • Summarizing data • Data reporting • Retaining data • Quality control • Data definitions
Revise AASHTO Guidelines • Published in 1992 • New technologies • New methods • NCHRP Project 7-16 • States involved Minnesota, Ohio, California, Idaho, Florida, Pennsylvania • Starting Date: March 2005 • Duration: Two years
ASTM Standards • E 1318 WIM Equipment • Specifications • Testing • Calibration • E 1442 Traffic Monitoring • E 1572 Classifying Vehicles
Data Quality Act Data Quality Quality Assurance Statement The Federal Highway Administration provides high-quality information to serve Government, industry, and the public in a manner that promotes public understanding. Standards and policies are used to ensure and maximize the quality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of its information. FHWA periodically reviews quality issues and adjusts its programs and processes to ensure continuous quality improvement. Requests for Correction On October 1, 2002, the Department of Transportation (DOT) issued agency guidelines to ensure the quality of disseminated information. If you are affected by information that the Department has disseminated on or after October 1, 2002 (i.e., if you are harmed because the information does not meet the standards of the guidelines or a correction of the information would benefit you), you may request that the Department correct that information. We regard information originally disseminated before October 1, 2002, as being subject to this correction process only if it remains readily available to the public (e.g., it is posted on a DOT website) and it continues to play a significant, active role in Department programs or in private sector decisions. Information on how to submit a request can be found at http://dms.dot.gov/dataquality.cfm
FHWA Traffic Data Needs • HPMS • Federal aid fund apportionments • Conditions and Performance Report • Highway Statistics • Traffic Volume Trends (TVT) • Vehicle Classification (HVTIS) • Truck Weight Study (TWS) • Safety Statistics
Data Elements • AADT • K-factors • D-factors • % Trucks • Average • Peak • Load Factors