Monday, May 08, 2023
the right design, selection, and placement of guardrails reduces crash frequency and severity - guardrails aren't even installed unless hitting them will result in less severe damage than whatever is past them off the road, and when possible, a run off area is better than a guard rail for minimizing damage
“You don’t want to indiscriminately line roadways with guardrail,” says Roger Bligh, a civil engineer with TTI. “If there’s a reasonable runoff recovery area out there, then we want a driver to have that opportunity rather than striking a guardrail. We generally use a guardrail only when striking it is going to be less severe than striking another obstacle or hazard that might be on the roadside.”
In Pennsylvania they are called " guide rails" to limit liability I suppose.
ReplyDeleteI've never heard of them called guide rails until now, thanks!
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