Tarmacadam patch repair in residential road

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
  • Follow the step-by-step patch repair of a failed tarmacadam road on a residential estate, including cutting out, excavation, base course and finishing with surface course. This patch is preparatory work for the slurry seal coat which will be applied to the whole road once patching is completed.

Комментарии • 105

  • @mickb6285
    @mickb6285 Год назад +2

    How refreshing it is to actually see some lads on the tools, instead of playing about with machine mounted breakers etc. After which the job usually ends looking like a right dogs breakfast. Excellent.

  • @Whammytap
    @Whammytap 6 месяцев назад

    Finally, a video about actual tarmacadam! Seems to be a lost art here in the States, everything is asphalt and folks assume you mean asphalt when you mention tarmac. Thanks for posting!

  • @janebottomley6852
    @janebottomley6852 Год назад +1

    Excellent work lads now come into Staffordshire, fed up of just hole filling

  • @dawnmariebankston5491
    @dawnmariebankston5491 7 лет назад +6

    Am I the only one who loves the dumping Sound?? Omg 😍

  • @kayleighwalters9463
    @kayleighwalters9463 4 года назад +6

    Should of used taccoat on all vertical edges on both base and wearing course.
    Edges were not compacted with roller on both base course and wearing should of vibrated both ways then dead roll to finish to ensure patch stays in..never brush the road into your edges always brush away into a pile and pick up with a shovel :)

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  4 года назад +1

      And another one who doesn't bother to read the context, just rattle on with your self-confirmed superior knowledge, don't bother with the spec or the job brief, you know best.....

    • @crerar117
      @crerar117 3 года назад

      Wouldn't use taccoat on the edges, underneath maybe? Looks like a spot on job to me. Did you cement wash after if it was getting surfaced dressed?

  • @saudz2371
    @saudz2371 6 лет назад +1

    Nice job I like the old people they perfect and great 👍🏼

  • @JonathanMaxwell27
    @JonathanMaxwell27 5 лет назад +2

    I remember the heat coming off of the pavement, and taste, as well as the squishy feeling of the asphalt.

  • @Blackmamba12345
    @Blackmamba12345 7 лет назад +3

    Very nice job.

  • @understandinglife2481
    @understandinglife2481 8 лет назад +2

    Amazing I wish Indian govt learn from these guys.

    • @temsbab1565
      @temsbab1565 4 года назад

      Its not good to patch roads these lads will be back next year doing it over again not there fault the council cheap out and only pay for patching

    • @Individjual
      @Individjual 2 года назад

      Why would they learn, they do and have to cut corners and piss poor mm of base on broken roads... Corruption is killing the common man and std infrastructure.

  • @joeharris3878
    @joeharris3878 2 года назад +1

    If I keep watching these videos, eventually I'll be able to calculate how many holes it would take to fill Albert Hall.

  • @naughtyknotty1
    @naughtyknotty1 3 года назад +1

    Hi, great video and what I would expect a repair to look like at the end.
    We’re have a lot of patch repairs carried out around our village and I’d like to ask a few questions if you don’t mind, as what’s being done looks pi$$ poor.
    When preparing an area, you use the blade to cut the outline of the area. Our guys are just hammering it out, which means there isn’t a straight edge to any repaired area. Would this effect the strength and longevity of the repair?
    Where the new surface has be relaid and rolled, how level should the new surface be with the existing? Most of our repairs are raised above the original surface and on some joints the repair is actually below the original surface. Is this acceptable?
    Should repairs be sealed around?

  • @jonshann
    @jonshann 6 лет назад +14

    For one get rid of that barrow pushed,them tips are awful..no edge compaction on base,no joint paint and sack the fella on the roller

  • @davelowe1977
    @davelowe1977 3 года назад +1

    So this is why the roads are becoming less flat. The sum total of the leveling effort is how much tarmac Tony happens to have in his barrow.

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  3 года назад +2

      Except that's not me. I was injured and have been permanently disabled since well before that was filmed, as is documented on my website. I'll admit to holding the camera, but my days of barrowing and raking are long gone. Still, it's fun to mock a disabled person, eh?

    • @davelowe1977
      @davelowe1977 3 года назад +1

      @@TonyMcCormack My comment was about the road surface not about you. Why is this kind of work done without something like a straight edge to make sure the surface is actually flat? I can't believe that in the 21C we are still patching critical infrastructure by guesswork.

    • @RealityCheck-gy9mo
      @RealityCheck-gy9mo 4 месяца назад +1

      Guess it’s because humans can still do things …. Especially using experience… but don’t worry in few years artisan skills will be gone
      And robots is will do it all
      While the humans graze on whatever is available to consume as human livestock 👍🏻

  • @lindsayyoung5424
    @lindsayyoung5424 4 года назад +1

    In Devon we just wait and fill the pot holes with snow and freezing water..... simples

  • @yammydodger1988
    @yammydodger1988 5 лет назад +1

    1. The excess tarmac shouldn't be swept onto the patch after being raked, sweep along the edge and discard waste.
    2. The edges of the patch should be trapped in with the roller before completing and only use vibe when reversing, it's neater.
    3. Turn off the vibe before reaching the edge of the patch, the vibe damages the existing surface and can cause the edges to crack.
    And why didn't you compact the edges on the base course?

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  5 лет назад +2

      Every gang has their preferred way of working. This video shows how one gang carry out their patching prior to slurry sealing. Their work was monitored and approved by the appropriate Highways' Inspector. Take up your concerns with them.....

    • @yammydodger1988
      @yammydodger1988 5 лет назад +2

      @@TonyMcCormack sack the inspector.

    • @lilnaughtyboys
      @lilnaughtyboys 4 года назад

      The comment i was looking for 👏

  • @netto880
    @netto880 6 лет назад +2

    Nice

  • @richardchamberlain3736
    @richardchamberlain3736 2 года назад

    no liquid bond on edges ?????

  • @neilhartley3339
    @neilhartley3339 4 года назад +4

    First day on the roller!! 🤣

    • @markwright3749
      @markwright3749 4 года назад

      Egsactly what I thought haha 💩💩💩

  • @yj4stara
    @yj4stara 5 лет назад

    Hmm I wonder why they don't pinch the edges on the top lift ?

  • @NasirIKLBP
    @NasirIKLBP 3 года назад

    I'm an apprentice - was wondering why a binder course wasn't laid

  • @zt1114
    @zt1114 3 года назад

    This is my work mates. Non even remember being filmed. When did you record this?

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  3 года назад

      The date is there on the video - 7th July 2015 almost 6 years ago, now!

  • @CraigBass1988
    @CraigBass1988 8 лет назад +2

    Hi Tony. Been a long time visiter to the site, from my years training as an apprentice to now being a practising engineer, but never knew you had these videos. A quick question regarding this patch: you didn't mention anything about painting the joint face with sealant at all? Was it just time constraints on the video, or do the council not specify it?

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  8 лет назад +2

      +Craig Schofield It's discussed in the accompanying web-page text. Because there was to be a slurry seal coat applied over the entire surface on completion of the patches, no jointing primer or over-banding was allegedly required.I didn't agree with this, neither did the lads doing the repairs who know they'll be back in 12 months time doing it all again, but when cost is the only criteria, and not quality or service life, this is the sort of job you end up with., sadly.

    • @gazebhoy364
      @gazebhoy364 7 лет назад +2

      Tony McCormack if it’s getting slurry sealed which we used in past why didn’t you’s just use a 14mm base and just base and top it with the 14mm base aswel saves money aswel as the base is cheaper m8t

  • @wd2699
    @wd2699 3 года назад

    What do you guys prefer? A single or Double roller?

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  3 года назад +1

      I'd always use a double drum when available, but many repair gangs only have access to a single drum/pedestrian roller and have no choice.

  • @kongthai..
    @kongthai.. 7 лет назад +1

    That's the better way to repair. We replace the bloody trash old South Asian culture with this repair method in Malaya 20 years ago. We still have problem with the old trash culture with the Telco, Electric contractors. 😓

  • @PeterMackett
    @PeterMackett Год назад

    That road surface is so bad it would have been cheaper to dig it all up!, end up looking like a patchwork quilt!

  • @stevedunningduckinggiraffe6296
    @stevedunningduckinggiraffe6296 5 лет назад +1

    why is the edge not sealed?

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  5 лет назад

      Please read some of the other comments where this issue is fully addressed.

  • @joeharris3878
    @joeharris3878 2 года назад

    Why isn't asphalt used instead?

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  2 года назад

      Because we routinely use macadam (bitmac) for small, residential roads and footpaths. Asphalt (increasingly SMA) is used for heavily trafficked carriageways.

  • @SaripudinPudin-vo6jw
    @SaripudinPudin-vo6jw 8 месяцев назад

    Kenapa ga d sabungin ja pembongkaranya biar hasilnya lebih bagus lg

  • @emermbiemeri
    @emermbiemeri 5 месяцев назад

    shofer kamjoni bageri. ngarkus krypontor puntor. vet 3 4 puntor

  • @yozzahuges9282
    @yozzahuges9282 4 года назад

    No cold pour and no punned edges tut tut

  • @luxuryva
    @luxuryva 4 года назад

    The edges are all broken look carefully at it was a perfect job there wouldn't be NY broken edges were water could get in

  • @JoaoVitor-wt8mz
    @JoaoVitor-wt8mz 6 лет назад +2

    Legal

  • @manojgaikwad7227
    @manojgaikwad7227 5 лет назад

    Sir
    Plz give me Name of that machine use as a Roller

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  5 лет назад +1

      It's a 28" Pedestrian Roller with jack-hammer atachment. Pretty standard kit in Britain and Ireland.

    • @manojgaikwad7227
      @manojgaikwad7227 5 лет назад

      @@TonyMcCormack
      Thank you 👍

  • @Dloweification
    @Dloweification 6 лет назад +5

    I didn't realize until 2:30ish that these guys are actually speaking English.

  • @desdas3941
    @desdas3941 3 года назад

    How deep to dig out ?

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  3 года назад

      It depends on the surface being patched but never less than 75mm or so

    • @desdas3941
      @desdas3941 3 года назад

      @@TonyMcCormack hi Tony,is there Any book just your book on block paving? Where asphalt re-instatemwnt shown start to finish? I bought your for block paving but would like to know about asphalt re-instatemwnt as. Well.

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  3 года назад

      @@desdas3941 Because there are, literally, hundreds of different methods, materials and techniques, there's not one single book I could suggest that I could honestly say covers it all. Something such as 'Roadworks' ( amzn.to/312w3W1 ) might be a good place to start.

  • @chrise202
    @chrise202 3 месяца назад

    This can't be UK it simply can't! This pothole is PROPERLY repaired.

  • @brentg6007
    @brentg6007 4 года назад

    Lol 😂 makes me want to get a go pro and show people how to pave or patch

  • @williamsmith8164
    @williamsmith8164 6 лет назад

    TONY, How different is tarmacadam compared to HRA if any.

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  6 лет назад

      From my website .... Macadams are all based on the principle of an aggregate coated with a binder, usually bitumen, hence "bituminous macadam". Asphalts are a mixture of asphaltic cement or mortar (often a bitumen with fine aggregates such as sands and grits) and some coarser aggregate, such as gravel or crushed rock. - www.pavingexpert.com/tarmac01.htm#types

  • @wonniewarrior
    @wonniewarrior 8 лет назад +3

    In Australia, not unusual to see the stupid council bastards shuck some mix into a hole after removing loose junk, then jumping on it themselves, problem is the patch on a patch last 1 hour tops in bad weather, then they patch that a week later after pothole bigger and more patch on a patch.

  • @anthonysands7260
    @anthonysands7260 8 лет назад +4

    how come you leave the edge ramped like that did you cross roll it all? probably not nor was a wacker plate used around edge probably not.. and get another rake man he's blind

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  7 лет назад +8

      Yeas, it was cxross-rolled, and no plate compactor was used. Funnily enough, the client and main contractor are more than happy with the rake-hand's work. Little bit of jealousy, perhaps?

  • @identitywithheld1027
    @identitywithheld1027 4 года назад

    No tack coat

  • @KeithDeley
    @KeithDeley 9 месяцев назад

    Where's the banding then that should be applied around the patch ,not a perfect job after all

  • @into_the_void
    @into_the_void 5 лет назад

    those fumes are pretty noxious I guess

  • @elprincr3954
    @elprincr3954 8 лет назад +2

    how can I get a job like this ?

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  8 лет назад +1

      apply to Warrington highways depth.

    • @kimjensen6943
      @kimjensen6943 8 лет назад +1

      El Princr åå

    • @georgepirelli4030
      @georgepirelli4030 7 лет назад +3

      Try working for a small residentail company for a couple years. They always need laborers. Then apply to a big union company show them u have experience n ull get hired. Thats what I did but it took me 4 years finally I got a call working for the biggest road construction company in the Country

    • @k2cr
      @k2cr 6 лет назад +1

      George Pirelli is the pay good? I'm curious

    • @georgepirelli4030
      @georgepirelli4030 6 лет назад +2

      Pottasium Dichromate I guess alot depends where u live and experience. But my advice would be to join the union. Go to ur local union hall and enroll alot of companies want u to be in the union first. I make $32 an hour right now

  • @RayTitske
    @RayTitske 8 лет назад +1

    its not holding for long

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  7 лет назад +6

      It's held for almost two years now, and, with the surface dressing in place, you can't even tell where the patch repair is located. I'd call that a success.

  • @shahidmehmood8346
    @shahidmehmood8346 6 лет назад

    Could have just resurfaced the entire road a micro dressing will become worser in a few months then ur back to square one. Do it once and right just saying

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  6 лет назад

      Then tell the local authority - I have no control over how they carry out such repairs. All I do is document the process.

    • @shahidmehmood8346
      @shahidmehmood8346 6 лет назад

      Tony McCormack lol your the one filming and telling me to inform them. I'm sure you must have told them at the time

  • @TheSecondWitness
    @TheSecondWitness Год назад

    And in Dallas Texas they just heap up the asphalt, way over the top, and that’s it. It dries to a massive speed bump in the middle of a street. The idiots in Dallas think it’s okay, cause the road workers keep on doing it this way for years, and no one ever corrects the way they do their work. Absolutely pathetic repairs.

  • @mikel9567
    @mikel9567 5 лет назад

    The patch has a sag in it. Not enough asphalt brought in, too much compaction.

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  5 лет назад +2

      Yet the highways assessor responsible for signing off the work and in effect guaranteeing payment to the contractor seems to have disagreed with you.
      Four years after the patch was undertaken, I can still see none of this "sag" you report and, although you probably won't believe it, the road is still perfectly serviceable. I know, because it's directly outside my daughter's home!

    • @lextacy2008
      @lextacy2008 4 года назад

      @@TonyMcCormack HAHAH that burn though

  • @elvisnotcostello
    @elvisnotcostello 8 лет назад +2

    discord brought me here

  • @jakehowie442
    @jakehowie442 4 года назад

    terrible cheap material will break-up by next winter...

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  4 года назад +1

      Yet, despite your undoubted expertise, here we are 5, almost 6, years later, and the repair is intact and performing exactly as intended! Strange, eh?

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 4 года назад

      @@TonyMcCormack Why not use concrete? That looks a mess and undoubtedly, as water or frost gets into the material, it will break up especially after heavy vehicles drive over it...

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  4 года назад +1

      @@jakehowie442 It's a macadam public carriageway. Why would you introduce a different surfacing? Further, a macadam patch can be trafficked within the hour whereas concrete patching would need to be kept free of traffic for a week at the very least. It may sometimes be hard to believe, but, generally speaking, highways engineers *do* know what they are doing!

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 4 года назад

      @@TonyMcCormack What lasts longer though? That macadam from Newcastle or concrete. Concrete is much more durable, so you should have just relayed the whole section of the road.

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  4 года назад +1

      @@jakehowie442 The macadam is not from Newcastle. Why would you think that? You are not familiar with the site, nor the project aims, the budgets, the other works taking place in the immediate area, the local logistics and the medium/long-term plan for the carriageway under repair. You're welcome to your opinion, but your opinion, in this case, is worthless.

  • @emermbiemeri
    @emermbiemeri 5 месяцев назад

    nedeke fojqe telekomit. kbla. telefoni. kabllovikin. mirbatje igelshtatin kam pas krais

  • @qu2alude593
    @qu2alude593 4 года назад

    This is so bad for your health

  • @boombayaa
    @boombayaa 6 лет назад +2

    They filled the hole with asphalt but it is a concrete road

    • @TonyMcCormack
      @TonyMcCormack  6 лет назад +2

      No. It is NOT a concrete road. It is a bitmac road - a specialised form of asphalt (bitumen) mixed with stone that is used to build the overwhelming majority of roads in Britain, Ireland and most of Europe.

  • @Miller4866
    @Miller4866 4 месяца назад

    There are a lot of armchair Tarmacers on here. It's embarrassing reading their opinions. 😂

  • @APHIXrs
    @APHIXrs Год назад

    who the fk is adam xD

  • @illmoneystar2871
    @illmoneystar2871 2 года назад

    Too tideous and time consuming!! Chipfill and Aggrefill are the way of the Future!!! 😎👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽🎓🎓🎓🦺🦺🦺