prost - let's not downgrade the profession of engineering with your ignorance of bridge engineering.
Bridge engineering like any facet of engineering, including aerospace, has today different constraints on it than when this bridge was designed 40 years ago. In the mid 60s and for some period prior and after, weight was a significant factor and so bridges were built with that in mind adn many bridge cross-section or member cross-sections varied nearly every 5 feet to thinner plates when possible to save weight. Today, labor is far more expensive and so we don't see this weight optimization.
Moreover, myself being the industry of heavy infrastructure structural engineering bridges, locks, towers etc, I can say that the bridge code, AASHTO, is the most conservative with respect to static and dynamic loads. Hence a non-redundant bridge that has been around for 40 years has seen much more fatigue than an airplane and it has performed as expected. This collapse is a tragedy but there are checks in place to make sure these tragadies don't happen everyday or even every decdade.
Many, many engineers and technicains know about corrosion. Anyone who has been in the industry or has an industry trade magazine can tell you this from all the advertising that corrosion protection system vendors do.
Often times we see members that have flanges or plates that are now 5 times the size they were due to the volumeric expansion of rusted laminated steel. The industry standard is to remove the coating, sand blast to a specific finish as required by the Structural Steel Protective Coating council (SSPC) and wherein necessary replace the deteriorated plates/members.
that this wasn't done here is certainly possible for a number of reasons:
1. The bridge was slated to replaced soon,
2. The bridge was encapsulated rather than paint removal,
3. The work wasn't yet set up or funded,
4. The work was part of a program and other critical areas were being addressed.
All the while, these types of bridges are inspected yearly compared to their redundant counterparts.
It's not that we don't know...but rather a matter of planning and funding and minimizing risk.
Regards,
Qshake
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