Actually, yes it was, so thanksCiro Pabón wrote:It's not my intention to discourage contributions to threads, I apologize if the facepalm picture I posted is interpreted as mockery of your posts, Andrés. Won't happen again, it's not what I meant.
But they drive there each seasson, so if they see them bigger each seasson... exactly on braking points... both of them... coincidence? It could be, but I´ve never bought coincidence theoriesCiro Pabón wrote: The fact that De La Rosa and Wurz complain about bumps in braking zones doesn't mean they are caused by braking, even if they say so. They're drivers, not pavement builders.
And what´s the reason to use an specific mix of rocks/asphalt? Because I guess with higer rock it´s better to support loads but it will be more prone to thermal cracking, but with higher asphalt mix it may induce corrugations or slippage cracking under heavy loads. I wonder what´s better for a race trackCiro Pabón wrote:That's a construction defect, not a problem inherent to porous asphalt.
Actually, porous asphalt, with a reduced amount of asphalt and a larger amount of rocks is better to support loads, that's why it's used in base courses.
The top layer is usually less porous because of durability issues. The less water that enters the top layer, the longer the layer will last.
However, having a larger amount of asphalt makes the layer more susceptible to plastic flow.
Anycase my only intention here was theorizing about what may be the problem, because I cannot belive all people in charge is so stupid to do not use porous asphalt if it´s perfectly valid. We´re not talking about Emperor Ecclestone as you call him, but any track owner too. It´s not one or two exceptions, it´s the norm, no track use porous asphalt except ovals, so IMHO most reasonable and cautious approach should be thinking we´re missing something about porous asphalt used for racing tracks. I was trying to find out what may be that reason we´re missing
Maybe it´s not the braking bumps problem, but there must be something apart from cost, because if it would be cost at least those resurfacing will be using porous asphalt, and they´re not, they continue resurfacing with traditional asphalt, even tracks at england, belgium, etc. where rain is almost a certainty, so sorry but I cannot believe all of them are so stupid, there must be some reason we don´t know