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This web site is dedicated to solutions for attaching structures to asphalt surfaces. Whether you need ideas on ways asphalt anchors can be used, a better understanding of the challenge of installing on asphalt, or you need our solutions -- we aim to address your questions and offer suggestions, even if they are not products that we make or sell.
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Installation requires drilling a hole and filling it with an inexpensive grout (EPX2), then pushing the anchor in until it is flush with the asphalt surface. The grout hardens in 15 minutes allowing immediate installation and use. Click on an image below for more information. Click here for anchor comparison table |
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Workhorse of the family. Rated at 2,000 lb. pull and 2,000 lb. shear. Accepts 3/8" or M8 bolts. 12" long, requires 7/8" hole and 1/2 of EPX2 grout package |
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APPLICATIONS |
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We are often asked about the engineering ratings for the SP asphalt anchors. The users need to know the pull resistance, and the sideways force, that the installed anchors can withstand.
We have run tests in a 30 year old, 3" asphalt parking lot with 4" compacted fine gravel underneath. With the criteria being that the anchor fails if it starts moving vertically, we found that the SP12 (installed in a 7/8" hole with EPX2 grout) can resist pull forces in excess of 2,000 lb.
When trying to specify the pull forces, our concern is the variability in the asphalt surfaces and their foundation. Asphalt contractors vary in the methods they use, as well as in the quality of the asphalt installation that is contracted for. A typical installation starts with a level ground, then a layer of aggregate 3 - 8 inches is applied. Some contractors compact the aggregate, some do not. The size of the aggregate's gravel can vary dramatically. Likewise, the type of asphalt used, its depth and its age, as well as how well it was compressed are all variables that have a significant impact on the strength of the bond between the grout and the roadway.
For a comprehensive guide to asphalt paving, check this link. For a guide to estimating the forces for a cluster of anchors, go here.
There is one parameter that can be specified, and that is the breaking point of the bolts that is used to attach the devices to the anchors. Our SP anchors have a M8 or 3/8" thread. 3/8" steel bolts Grade 5 are rated to withhold safely 2,300 lb. (1,000 Kg) in a pull direction. They will withstand a higher force in the shear direction. (None of the industry standards specifies a shear force rating for bolts.)
Updated 11/24/2012
GROUT: To get the best holding force and durability, anchors installed in asphalt need to be embedded in a special cement mixture, referred to as "grout". The grout must be cement-based and must expand as it cures. Fast curing is a distinct advantage, as the installation can proceed within minutes of the sinking of the anchor in the ground. The grout should be self-leveling (meaning that it pours easily and will fill all the crevices in the hole) immune to standing water. AAG's EPX2 is a 14 oz prepackaged grout. Just add 2 oz of water and knead, then pour right out of the re-lockable bag. One EPX2 provides enough grout for the installation of 2 SP14 or SP12.
Anchors need to be embedded in a special cement mixture, referred to as "grout"
The slide show demonstrates how to install a bike rack to asphalt using SP14
Anchoring any device to an asphalt pavement is quite different from anchoring to concrete surfaces. Asphalt is made of small aggregate stones, held together by the bitumen blacktop. Over time, or under continuous pressure, the bitumen flows, and the surface yields. The following is an exerpt from a white paper published by us on this topic.
There are 4 ways to attach devices to asphalt:
1. Adhesive: This is the simplest way, but it may not work reliably on older surfaces; it will also offer a limited force resistance. The failure mode of gluing metal plates to asphalt is that the asphalt layer close to the surface peels off and the plate comes away with about 5mm (1/4") of asphalt. This does not happen overnight, and clearly depends on the quality of the surface as well as on the forces involved. As a rule, using adhesive requires a large area of contact between the structure and the asphalt.
2. Anchors:
3. Anchors Plus Adhesive: Stronger for a large area of contact between plate and asphalt..
4. Concrete Patches: This is the most reliable method, but likely to be the most expensive solution. The surface where the mounting bolts need to attach to the ground is drilled out to a diameter of at least 4" and to a depth of at least 18". The asphalt is removed and concrete is poured instead. Once the concrete hardened, concrete anchors are installed as usual.