
Building a Macadam Road — Cheap, Dry Highways from Small Broken Stone
The Romans built superb roads by piling up massive stone foundations, but their method was slow and ruinously expensive. In the 1820s the Scottish surveyor John McAdam threw the foundation away. He realised that a road does not need a heavy base if the soil beneath it is kept dry — and that a surface of small, angular broken stones will lock together under traffic into a hard, smooth crust.
His rules were simple and strict: break every stone small and to a uniform size, raise the road in the middle so water runs off, and keep the subsoil drained. Done right, the stones knit together, the rain sheds away, and the dry ground carries the load. Macadam roads were a fraction of the cost of the old highways and could be built almost anywhere, and they spread across the world.
The method still underlies modern roads. When stone dust alone no longer stood up to fast rubber tyres and their dust, engineers bound the broken stone with tar — tarmacadam, soon shortened to tarmac — and from there to the asphalt that paves the planet. It all begins with small stones and good drainage.
说明
Understand the McAdam idea
Understand the McAdam idea
Set out and drain the bed
Set out and drain the bed
所需工具:
ShovelBreak the stone small
Break the stone small
此步骤所需材料:
Crushed Stone500 公斤所需工具:
Stone HammerGauge the stone size
Gauge the stone size
所需工具:
Sizing RingLay the first layer
Lay the first layer
所需工具:
RakeCompact the layer
Compact the layer
所需工具:
Road RollerBuild up in thin layers
Build up in thin layers
此步骤所需材料:
Crushed Stone500 公斤Hold the camber
Hold the camber
Bind with stone dust
Bind with stone dust
此步骤所需材料:
Stone Dust80 公斤Open to traffic
Open to traffic
Maintain with small stone
Maintain with small stone
Toward tarmacadam
Toward tarmacadam
材料
2- 500 公斤占位符
- 80 公斤占位符
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