Paver Speed — Highway Mainline Pull
Paving speed to balance highway mainline pull from plant rate, width, lift and density.
Wide echelon-width pulls at 350 t/h still only need ~6 m/min — paving is slower than walking, always. Crews who 'make time' at 12 m/min are outrunning their rollers and banking density failures.
Formula
Note: Paving estimates only — the project mix design, agency specification and the plant's QC data govern. Temperature models are simplified; verify with an infrared gun and density gauge on the mat.
Paving speed to balance highway mainline pull from plant rate, width, lift and density. A free asphalt paving temperature & logistics tool — no sign-up, no upload, instant results in your browser.
About Paver Speed — Highway Mainline Pull
Paver Speed — Highway Mainline Pull computes the governing relationship v = TPH·η / (W·h·ρ·60) live as you type. Wide echelon-width pulls at 350 t/h still only need ~6 m/min — paving is slower than walking, always. Crews who 'make time' at 12 m/min are outrunning their rollers and banking density failures. Defaults are pre-filled with realistic values for this exact scenario, and the worked example substitutes your numbers step by step so the math is never a black box.
How to use Paver Speed — Highway Mainline Pull
- 1Enter your values — Plant/delivery rate, Paving width, Compacted thickness, Compacted density and more (sensible defaults are pre-filled).
- 2Read the live results: Paver speed, 8-h shift output.
- 3Check the "with your numbers" line to see v = TPH·η / (W·h·ρ·60) substituted step by step.
- 4Adjust inputs until the scenario matches yours, then copy or share the result.
Why use Paver Speed — Highway Mainline Pull?
- ✓Instant, free and private — every calculation runs client-side in your browser; nothing is uploaded
- ✓Built on the stated formula v = TPH·η / (W·h·ρ·60) with authoritative sources cited on the page (NAPA — HMA paving handbook & best practices)
- ✓Wide echelon-width pulls at 350 t/h still only need ~6 m/min — paving is slower than walking, always.
- ✓SI ⇄ Imperial toggle converts your inputs in place, so you can work in the units your drawings use
Frequently asked questions
What formula does the paver speed — highway mainline pull use?+
It evaluates v = TPH·η / (W·h·ρ·60), exactly as published. Sources: NAPA — HMA paving handbook & best practices. The substituted worked example on the page lets you verify every step against the textbook.
How should I read the result — and how far can I trust it?+
Wide echelon-width pulls at 350 t/h still only need ~6 m/min — paving is slower than walking, always. Paving estimates only — the project mix design, agency specification and the plant's QC data govern. Temperature models are simplified; verify with an infrared gun and density gauge on the mat.
When is this calculator the right tool for the job?+
Paving speed to balance highway mainline pull from plant rate, width, lift and density. A free asphalt paving temperature & logistics tool. Crews who 'make time' at 12 m/min are outrunning their rollers and banking density failures. For neighbouring scenarios, the related tools below cover the same engine with different presets.
Does it support both metric and imperial units?+
Yes — the SI ⇄ Imperial toggle converts the values already in the fields, preserving the physical quantity, so you can flip mid-calculation without re-entering anything.
Related tools
- Paver Speed — City Street (Stop-Start)
- Paver Speed — Shoulder Paving
- Paver Speed — Thin Overlay (High Speed)
- Paver Speed — Airport Runway
- Paver Speed — Handwork Crew Rate
- Paver Speed — Echelon Pair Balance
- Paver Speed — MTV-Buffered Operation
- Steel Logistics — Laydown Buffer Sizing
- Section 179 — Fleet Purchase Year
Related Manufacturing tools
Spindle Speed Calculator — Aluminum 6061
Carbide starting RPM for milling Aluminum 6061: n = 1000·Vc/(π·D) with a handbook cutting speed preset.
● LiveSpindle Speed Calculator — Mild Steel 1018
Carbide starting RPM for milling Mild Steel 1018: n = 1000·Vc/(π·D) with a handbook cutting speed preset.
● LiveSpindle Speed Calculator — Stainless 304
Carbide starting RPM for milling Stainless 304: n = 1000·Vc/(π·D) with a handbook cutting speed preset.
● Live