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Bridge inspector

Posted November 07, 2008 10:16 AM

From The Engineer:

The changing effects of weather and temperature, road salt and traffic all take their toll on bridges, causing damage such as hairline cracks, flaking concrete and rust. But up until now, inspecting a bridge has been a manual process - inspectors have always examined bridges for visible damage directly on site. That's all set to change thanks to new image processing software developed by researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Industrial Mathematics in Kaiserslautern and scientists from the Italian company Infracom . The new software they have written can examine a photograph of a bridge for irregularities and then mark the respective area on the photo to alert an inspector to any problems. Building the software was no easy task. Bridges all differ in terms of their shape, construction material and surface structure, while their colour depends on the material, the dirt or fouling, and the degree of humidity. The software developers had to build a database of images featuring many different types of bridges that had experienced many different sorts of damage, while categorising the type of damage with the visual image itself. But the results of the development effort have paid off. Now, when a new photograph of a bridge whose characteristics are unknown is presented to the system, that image is compared with those in the database. The software can then determine whether there are any irregularities. If there are, it marks the respective area on the photograph, allowing a bridge inspector to decide how serious the damage is.

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#1

Re: Bridge inspector

11/07/2008 8:04 PM

<"....'Unlike a human, the tool doesn't miss any abnormalities - even minor damage is identified and signalled,' said ITWM scientist Markus Rauhut.....">

I can see how a photo may capture a picture, but the picture marked area/s still need to be checked and interpreted by a person.

That means the Jobs of Bridge Inspectors are safe for the meantime.

I wonder if that Software would have detected the problem with the I-35W bridge rush-hour collapse in Minnesota before its catastrophic collapse in 2007.

Kind Regards....

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#2

Re: Bridge inspector

11/08/2008 1:10 PM

No technology is of much value unless it's properly applied. Many times the reason needed repairs are not done is more a matter of funding and timing than of inspection.

Hopefully those reasons are becoming more a thing of the past.

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#3

Re: Bridge inspector

11/08/2008 8:10 PM

While I learned to have respect for reports coming from the Fraunhofer Institute, This one does not quite pass the smell test. When a structure is so bent, that picture comparison works, it is in real trouble, I would say. Also, high quality pictures made right after it was built are not available as a rule. So, what gives?

It also incapable to discover internal rusting, a fatigue crack starting in a member (a nasty bugger) a cracking weld or a tired / substandard rivet. Older bridges are getting critical rivets drilled out gradually, and replaced by bolts during maintenance for that reason.

On the other hand, recording vibrational signatures now for every structural member works now. Bridges are built with many repeated, identical elements. When one or a few deviates in the signatures, close inspection is warranted. No hidden or starting defect can escape that way. The bridge inspectors use small hammer and their calibrated ears for that purpose already!

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#4
In reply to #3

Re: Bridge inspector

11/08/2008 9:46 PM

Hello leveles

from me

Kind Regards....

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