Engineering Test Bank | HCM
2010, AASHTO, Signal Timing &
Pavement Design
PART 0: THE TABLE OF CONTENTS
● PART I: THE PREVIEW
○ The Operational Translation
○ The "Critical Axioms" Matrix
● PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
○ Tier 1 (Questions 1–15): Foundational Syntax & Application
■ Core Focus: Hard Deck definitions, HCM LOS thresholds, AASHTO baseline
parameters, pavement variables.
○ Tier 2 (Questions 16–35): Complex Application & Simulation
■ Core Focus: Formula deployment, isolated variable changes, K-value
derivations, ESAL distribution.
○ Tier 3 (Questions 36–60): Grandmaster Synthesis
■ Core Focus: Overlapping domain conflicts, high-stakes clearance failures,
multimodal trade-offs, catastrophic failure prevention.
PART I: THE PREVIEW
Mastery of this material translates directly into elite analytical competence, hedging against
catastrophic infrastructure failure and guaranteeing defensible engineering decisions under
rigorous Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and AASHTO standards. By internalizing the
rigid physics of geometric design and the thermodynamic flow of traffic networks, practitioners
bypass rote calculation and achieve high-velocity, synthesized architectural dominance in the
field. The evolution from the 1950s focus on pure vehicular capacity to the multimodal,
systems-level analysis of the Highway Capacity Manual (HCM) 2010 requires an
uncompromising grasp of complex variable interactions.
The following tables define the absolute boundaries of operational safety and capacity.
,HCM 2010 Level of Signalized Control Unsignalized Control Freeway Density
Service Delay (s/veh) Delay (s/veh) (pc/mi/ln)
LOS A \le 10.0 \le 10.0 \le 11.0
LOS B > 10.0 to \le 20.0 > 10.0 to \le 15.0 > 11.0 to \le 18.0
LOS C > 20.0 to \le 35.0 > 15.0 to \le 25.0 > 18.0 to \le 26.0
LOS D > 35.0 to \le 55.0 > 25.0 to \le 35.0 > 26.0 to \le 35.0
LOS E > 55.0 to \le 80.0 > 35.0 to \le 50.0 > 35.0 to \le 45.0
LOS F > 80.0 (or v/c > 1.0) > 50.0 (or v/c > 1.0) > 45.0 (or v/c > 1.0)
Data synthesized from HCM 2010 performance thresholds.
Design Speed (mph) Min. Crest Curve Min. Sag Curve Stopping Sight
K-Value K-Value Distance (ft)
30 30 37 200
45 98 79 360
55 185 115 495
60 245 136 570
Data synthesized from AASHTO Green Book standard values.
● The "Critical Axioms" Matrix
● AASHTO Sight Distance Physics: Driver eye height is strictly 3.5 ft; the enforced object
height is 2.0 ft for stopping sight distance (SSD), superseding legacy standards.
● Webster’s Optimum Cycle Length: C_0 = (1.5L + 5) / (1 - Y), where L is total lost time
and Y is the sum of critical flow ratios. The equation mathematically collapses if Y
exceeds 1.0.
● ITE Kinematic Clearance: Yellow Change Interval = t + v / (2a \pm 64.4g). Reaction time
(t) defaults to 1.0s; deceleration (a) defaults to 10 ft/s².
● AASHTO 1993 Pavement Physics: Flexible structural capacity depends on layer
coefficients (a_i) and drainage (m_i) ; Rigid capacity hinges on load transfer (J-factor),
drainage (C_d), and the composite subgrade modulus (k).
● Saturation Flow Adjustments: Base flow (s_0) is hardcoded at 1,900 pc/h/ln. Friction
variables (e.g., parking f_p, bus blockage f_{bb}) are fractional penalties that degrade this
maximum theoretical throughput.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1: Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: Under the HCM 2010 methodology, which of the following is the PRIMARY performance
measure used to define the Level of Service (LOS) for a basic freeway segment? A) Average
travel speed as a percentage of base free-flow speed B) Control delay in seconds per vehicle C)
Density in passenger cars per mile per lane (pc/mi/ln) D) Volume-to-capacity (v/c) ratio
● The Answer: C (Density in passenger cars per mile per lane (pc/mi/ln))
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Travel speed as a percentage of FFS characterizes urban street
facilities, not uninterrupted basic freeway segments.
○ B is incorrect: Control delay serves as the exclusive performance measure for
signalized and unsignalized intersections.
○ D is incorrect: While the v/c ratio informs capacity boundaries, density is the direct
, grading metric for freeway LOS A through E.
The Mentor's Analysis: Freeway performance is fundamentally governed by the physical
proximity of vehicles, not merely their velocity. Speeds on freeways remain relatively constant
until capacity is breached; thus, density is the only metric sensitive enough to reflect
deteriorating freedom to maneuver. Professional/Academic Intuition: Density dictates
uninterrupted freeway LOS; control delay dictates interrupted intersection LOS.
Q2: A driver is traveling on a level roadway and detects an obstacle. Based on current AASHTO
Green Book standards, what are the EXACT assumed heights for the driver’s eye and the
roadway object used to calculate Stopping Sight Distance (SSD)? A) Eye: 3.5 ft, Object: 6.0 in
B) Eye: 3.5 ft, Object: 2.0 ft C) Eye: 3.75 ft, Object: 2.0 ft D) Eye: 4.25 ft, Object: 3.5 ft
● The Answer: B (Eye: 3.5 ft, Object: 2.0 ft)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The 6.0-inch object height is an outdated legacy AASHTO metric.
○ C is incorrect: 3.75 ft represents an archaic assumption for driver eye height before
the dominance of lower-profile passenger cars.
○ D is incorrect: 4.25 ft / 3.5 ft are the parameters occasionally referenced for heavy
vehicles or passing sight distance (PSD) to detect an oncoming vehicle.
The Mentor's Analysis: Geometric design requires universal constants to ensure systemic
safety across diverse vehicle fleets. The 2.0-foot object height represents an object (like a
vehicle's tail lights) that involves critical risk, offering a balanced mitigation of collision severity
and earthwork economics. Professional/Academic Intuition: SSD geometric parameters are
inviolable: 3.5 ft eye height striking a 2.0 ft object.
Q3: In the AASHTO 1993 flexible pavement design equation, which parameter DIRECTLY
accounts for the relative loss of strength in aggregate layers below the Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA)
due to moisture exposure? A) The standard normal deviate (Z_R) B) The structural layer
coefficient (a_i) C) The drainage coefficient (m_i) D) The subgrade resilient modulus (M_R)
● The Answer: C (The drainage coefficient (m_i))
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Z_R dictates statistical design reliability, mathematically unrelated to
hydraulic mechanics.
○ B is incorrect: a_i measures the inherent structural capacity of a unit thickness of
material under optimal, dry conditions.
○ D is incorrect: M_R defines the baseline structural support of the underlying
roadbed soil, not the unbound aggregate layers' reaction to water infiltration.
The Mentor's Analysis: > Pavement thermodynamics dictate that saturated granular bases
rapidly lose shear strength. The m_i coefficient mathematically downgrades the contribution of a
layer's structural number (SN) based on its drainage time and seasonal moisture exposure.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Water destroys structural capacity; the m_i coefficient
mathematically quantifies this destruction.
Q4: When calculating the optimum cycle length (C_0) for a signalized intersection using
Webster’s formula, the variable L represents total lost time. Which elements MUST be summed
to calculate L accurately? A) Total red clearance intervals across all phases B) Total start-up lost
time plus total clearance lost time for all critical phases C) Total yellow change intervals minus
perception-reaction time D) The sum of the critical flow ratios (Y) multiplied by the number of
phases
● The Answer: B (Total start-up lost time plus total clearance lost time for all critical
phases)
● Distractor Analysis: