Vance Wiley said:
Re Moving bridge, which way is north
Seems like the docs (and myself) refer to the pylon end as the "North" end since that was it's intended final orientation.
Vance Wiley said:
the 1% slope is 1.74 feet for the main span.
The max allowed angle change during moving was 0.5 degrees ???
I went back through the SW view videos at the construction area (
Move part 1) and prior to final setting (
Move part 3) and it is hard to tell if or when they adjust tilt. Prior to seating the bridge there are many adjustments for side-to-side and end-to-end tilt, but it is unclear if this is anything more than just raising the overall height in discrete steps.
I then went back to the original version of "Move Part 3" - after it was cropped but before it was slowed down [uploaded to
Whirled Gnus as
Move part 3 - SW view (fast)] - and the SPTM sequence (after the bridge is squared up N-S) appears to be:
[ol 1]
[li]
lower north end slightly[/li]
[li]
raise south end a lot[/li]
[li]raise entire span and move into final position[/li]
[li]lower south end (slightly) to final seated position[/li]
[li]lower north end (slightly) to final seated position[/li]
[li]drop the towers and scurry back to the parking area[/li]
[/ol]
This is confusing as hell because 1. and 2. imply that either:
[ol A]
[li]The pier end was installed higher that the north pylon end, contrary to the PGL elevations in the construction plans: Pier 30.693 and Pylon 32.44 (or my misunderstanding of what these numbers represent).[/li]
[li]The bridge was constructed with the Pylon end significantly higher than the pier end.[/li]
[li]The span was heavily tipped
during the move as the pylon end was driven over the highway median strip.[/li]
[li]I'm not seeing something.[/li]
[/ol]
My impressions:
[ol A]
[li]Impossible ?[/li]
[li]No logical reason to do this ?[/li]
[li]A possibility because the initial setpoints/calibration levels were lost during the mysterious computer shutdown during the move.[/li]
[li]A possibility because the videos are not super high-resolution, the SW viewpoint is elevated and off to the side, and 1% tilt is not much.[/li]
[/ol]
FIU was also bragging about this being the largest pedestrian bridge moved by SPTM in U.S. History. That's quite a feat by itself, but then they had to increase the degree of difficulty by making a sharp 90 degree turn while also running off a curb and over a median.
More wierd stuff to add to the ever-growing pile of wierdness.