Tuesday, November 6, 2007
136-8

Influence of Vehicle Type and Soil Conditions on Soil Rutting.

Paul Ayers1, Heidi Howard2, Alan Anderson2, Kun Liu1, Phil Woodford3, and Qinghe Li1. (1) Department of Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science, University of Tennessee, 2506 E. J. Chapman Drive, Knoxville, TN 37996, (2) USA-CERL, U.S. Army Eng Res & Dev Ctr. CERL, PO Box 9005, Champaign, IL 61826, (3) U.S. Army, Fort Riley, KS 66442

Vehicle rutting is a measure of the impact of a vehicle on the terrain. This study investigated the influence of vehicle type, vehicle weight, soil conditions and turning on soil rut depth and width. A vehicle impact study was conducted on two tracked vehicles (M1A1 - combat tank and M577A2 - armored personnel carrier) and two wheeled vehicles (M998A2 - heavy expanded mobility tactical truck and M998 - high mobility multi-purpose wheeled vehicle) on October 19, 2004 (dry conditions) and April 12, 2005 (wet conditions) at Fort Riley Military Installation, Kansas. A Differential Global Positioning System (DGPS) was used to track vehicle movement while conducting sixteen spirals per vehicle (except for the HUM-V with fourteen spirals performed); four at fast speeds and four at slow speeds on two different soil types at two soil moisture conditions; wet and dry. The GPS was used to determine the vehicle speed and turning radius along the spiral. Rut depth and width were evaluated at 891 points along the sixty-two spirals. The influence of vehicle type, vehicle weight, soil conditions and turning on soil rut depth and width is investigated.