CaptainC wrote:BHP has become much more popular since the road had bitumen put down.
Xplora wrote: Within 5 years of sealing it had hit the national blackspot road list. Almost every fatal and serious crash involved a motorcycle (one push bike and one car). The seal was done so poorly and on the cheap that it actually needs ripping up and is becoming more dangerous.
paidal_chalne_vala wrote:The BHP road from the Dam wall down to the Omeo Hwy. is deteriorating and needs to be ripped up and resealed PROPERLY . Every green season the Mt. Hotham road is given some kind of maintenance work which is necessary.
This does not happen along the BHP rd..
Xplora wrote: How does Australia's highest road melt? Perhaps it is closer to the sun. There seems to be a problem there.
north-north-west wrote:Wouldn't the quality of the tar and/or gravel/tar ratios have a big impact on that?
Baeng72 wrote:Xplora wrote: How does Australia's highest road melt? Perhaps it is closer to the sun. There seems to be a problem there.
It's such a small fraction closer to the sun as to be irrelevant. 2000m is a small fraction of 147.3 million Km.
The Southern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun in Summer, hence the more direct, stronger solar radiation heating the environment.
The atmosphere would be slightly less dense at the top of the GAR, but you're still well in the Stratosphere.
I think the road melts there for the same reason it melts near the sea. More solar radiation in Summer.
Happy to be shown wrong however.
peregrinator wrote:Baeng72 wrote:Xplora wrote: How does Australia's highest road melt? Perhaps it is closer to the sun. There seems to be a problem there.
It's such a small fraction closer to the sun as to be irrelevant. 2000m is a small fraction of 147.3 million Km.
The Southern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun in Summer, hence the more direct, stronger solar radiation heating the environment.
The atmosphere would be slightly less dense at the top of the GAR, but you're still well in the Stratosphere.
I think the road melts there for the same reason it melts near the sea. More solar radiation in Summer.
Happy to be shown wrong however.
I get the feeling that Xplora's delicious irony has not been perceived.
Icarus also had a problem with the sun.
Xplora wrote:...................As for the GAR, every year it melts in summer and there are warnings placed for the Hotham area. How does Australia's highest road melt? Perhaps it is closer to the sun. There seems to be a problem there. ..............
Baeng72 wrote:peregrinator wrote:Baeng72 wrote:It's such a small fraction closer to the sun as to be irrelevant. 2000m is a small fraction of 147.3 million Km.
The Southern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun in Summer, hence the more direct, stronger solar radiation heating the environment.
The atmosphere would be slightly less dense at the top of the GAR, but you're still well in the Stratosphere.
I think the road melts there for the same reason it melts near the sea. More solar radiation in Summer.
Happy to be shown wrong however.
I get the feeling that Xplora's delicious irony has not been perceived.
Icarus also had a problem with the sun.
Ah well, after a dull, possibly misunderstood, joke about the media treatment of Button Man yesterday, I decided to play everything will a straight bat today. That'll teach me.
Consider me gotten.
paidal_chalne_vala wrote:It is only a matter of time until the BHP road becomes utter poo... and visibly start to fall apart .It will be allowed to be slowly demolished by way of neglect. To formally rip it up would involves two shires agreeing on something , anything!.
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