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What Is Asphalt Milling and When Is It Needed?

What Is Asphalt Milling and When Is It Needed?

April 9, 2025

Over time, asphalt surfaces degrade due to continuous vehicular load, environmental exposure, and oxidation. Surface distress, manifesting as alligator cracking, rutting, ravelling, and pothole formation, compromises both structural integrity and safety. When conventional patching fails to provide a sustainable solution, asphalt milling emerges as the most efficient method for surface rehabilitation. Asphalt milling, also known

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New Asphalt Construction: A Comprehensive Guide

New Asphalt Construction: A Comprehensive Guide

September 6, 2025

Asphalt construction is the process of building paved surfaces, such as roads, parking lots, driveways, airport runways, and pathways, using asphalt, which is a mixture of aggregates (like crushed stone, sand, or gravel) bound together with bitumen (a sticky, petroleum-based material). Constructing new asphalt surfaces from scratch is the cornerstone of building strong and reliable

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Asphalt Repair: Key Considerations Before Starting

Asphalt Repair: Key Considerations Before Starting

September 6, 2025

Asphalt repair encompasses targeted techniques, such as crack filling, patching, seal coating, or resurfacing, designed to address damage or wear on asphalt surfaces without resorting to full reconstruction. These repairs are vital for preserving pavement integrity, extending its usable life, and preventing minor defects from escalating into costly replacements.  According to industry estimates, the cost

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Mill and Pave Asphalt: Key Considerations Before Starting

Mill and Pave Asphalt: Key Considerations Before Starting

September 6, 2025

The process of milling and paving asphalt is known as cold milling, followed by overlay. It involves removing the top-worn layer of pavement and applying fresh asphalt. It’s a highly effective method for restoring deteriorated surfaces, improving ride quality, correcting grades and slopes, and recycling reclaimed pavement (RAP). A Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) study found

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