Culvert Liner Demonstration Held in Texas
Snap-Tite, a no-dig culvert lining solution, and the Texas Department of Transportation (TXDOT) Odessa District recently held a demonstration at the Stanton TXDOT maintenance office in Martin County, Texas, showcasing how to install a Snap-Tite liner into an aging and deteriorated culvert.
The demonstration was attended by approximately 30 people, which included TXDOT maintenance personnel and engineers.
“The demonstration is a good way to show DOT personnel and attendees about how the Snap-Tite pipe is joined together on a project site and how easily their own crews could do this type of installation,” said Trevor Cone, Snap-Tite regional sales manager.
The demonstration began at 9:30 a.m. and was completed in one day. The original arched corrugated metal pipe (CMP) culvert, which was 32 by 24 in. in diameter, was past its design life and failing. It was under the only entrance into the
“We found the Snap-Tite installation procedure easy to pick up for first-timers,” said Zane Honeyfield, TXDOT maintenance supervisor in
The HDPE Snap-Tite culvert-lining pipe, which has a patented male/female machining at each end of the HDPE, allows it to be ‘snapped’ together, piece-by-piece, and pushed into the full length of an existing pipe. Then the annular space and any voids between the old culvert and new liner are filled in with grout. The pipe liner is available in lengths from 2 to 50 ft and is available for culverts with diameters from 8 to 84 in. Snap-Tite also meets American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) Standard M326 for rehabilitating culverts.
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