October 6, 2004

Refer to: HSA-10/WZ-192

Mr. John H. Mortensen
Vice President
NAFISCO Traffic Control and Protection
4152 Warren Avenue
Hillside, Illinois 60162

Dear Mr. Mortensen:

Thank you for your letter of July 21, 2004, requesting Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) acceptance of your company's Type I and Type II barricades as crashworthy traffic control devices for use in work zones on the National Highway System (NHS). Accompanying your letter were detailed specifications and conceptual drawings of your barricade. You requested that we find these devices acceptable for use on the NHS under the provisions of National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Report 350 "Recommended Procedures for the Safety Performance Evaluation of Highway Features."

Introduction
The FHWA guidance on crash testing of work zone traffic control devices is contained in two memoranda. The first, dated July 25, 1997, titled "INFORMATION: Identifying Acceptable Highway Safety Features," established four categories of work zone devices: Category I devices are those lightweight devices which are to be self-certified by the vendor, Category II devices are other lightweight devices which need individual crash testing but with reduced instrumentation, Category III devices are barriers and other fixed or heavy devices also needing crash testing with normal instrumentation, and Category IV devices are trailer mounted lighted signs, arrow panels, etc. for which crash testing requirements have not yet been established. The second guidance memorandum was issued on August 28, 1998, and is titled "INFORMATION: Crash Tested Work Zone Traffic Control Devices." This later memorandum lists devices that are acceptable under Categories I, II, and III.

Your request is for FHWA acceptance of Type I and Type II barricades which are of the same materials and dimensions as the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) Type II barricades which were crash tested by the Bent Manufacturing Company and found acceptable in the FHWA acceptance letter WZ-06 of November 23, 1998, and distributed by the FHWA as generic models in the FHWA acceptance letter WZ-54 of September 15, 2000. Your barricades will be 24 and 36 inches wide whereas the crash-tested barricades were 36 inches wide.

Because the materials you propose to use are identical to those in the crash tested Type II barricade we concur that the Type I and Type II barricades detailed in the enclosures, can be expected to perform in a similar manner to the tested barricade. Therefore, it is acceptable for use on the NHS under the range of conditions the Type II barricade was tested, when proposed by a State.

Please note the following standard provisions that apply to the FHWA letters of acceptance:

 

Sincerely yours,

/Original Signed by/

John R. Baxter, P.E.
Director, Office of Safety Design
Office of Safety