Publication | Open Access
Contactless Bridge Weigh-in-Motion
139
Citations
21
References
2016
Year
EngineeringMeasurementMechanical EngineeringEducationContactless Bridge Weigh-in-motionStructural PerformanceUnited KingdomStructural EngineeringBridge DesignMechanicsGross WeightSystems EngineeringStructural DynamicKinematicsBridge Weigh-in-motionStructural Health MonitoringPontoon BridgeCivil EngineeringStructural MechanicsVibration Control
Bridge weigh-in-motion (WIM) uses existing bridges to find the weights of vehicles that pass overhead. Contactless bridge weigh-in-motion (cBWIM) uses bridges to weigh vehicles without the need for any sensors to be attached to the bridge. A camera is mounted on the back of a telescope, which magnifies the image to the extent that submillimeter bridge deflections can be measured accurately. A second camera is used to monitor traffic and to determine axle spacings. The two cameras are synchronized using light-emitting diodes (LEDs) activated by an interval timer. The exact position of the test vehicle relative to the bridge influence line is determined by optimization at a postprocessing stage. The new WIM concept was tested on a bridge in the United Kingdom. In a modest test sample of eight statically weighed vehicles, cBWIM was shown to be a feasible alternative to other forms of WIM. Accuracy of gross weight is already reasonably good; accuracy of groups and individual axles will require greater magnification or additional cameras.
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