Pavement Condition Index
Pavement Condition Index
Pavement Condition Index
METHOD
compiled by Basil David Daniel
Main Reference:
M.Y. Shahin, Pavement Management for Airports, Roads and Parking Lots, Springer, New York, 2005
Pavement Condition Index (PCI) Method
Background
The Pavement Condition Index (PCI) method is used to obtain a Pavement Condition Index
(PCI) value for pavements through a visual survey of the pavement. The Pavement Condition
Index (PCI) is a numerical rating of the pavement condition that ranges from 0 to 100 (refer
to Figure 1), with 0 being the worst possible condition and 100 being the best possible
condition. The Pavement Condition Index (PCI) method was developed by the Construction
Engineering Research Laboratory of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This method can be
used on both asphalt surfaced as well as jointed portland cement concrete (PCC) pavements.
Figure 1: Pavement Condition Index (PCI) Rating Scale and the corresponding Level of
Service and Maintenance Activity
Equipment: Inspectors need a hand odometer or measuring tape to measure distress lengths
and areas, a straight edge, a ruler to measure the depth of ruts or depressions, and the PCI
distress manual (to assist in identifying distresses and determining their severity levels).
Procedure: A sample unit is inspected by measuring the distress type and severity according
to the PCI distress manual, and recording the data on the flexible pavement survey sheet (as
shown in Figure 2). One data sheet is used for each sample unit.
Figure 2: Pavement Condition Survey Sheet
Dividing a Pavement Section Into Sample Units
A sample unit is defined as the portion of pavement section designated only for the purpose
of pavement inspection. Figure 3 shows an example of sample units.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
The number of sample units in a pavement section to be inspected can be determined using
Figure 4. When performing initial inspection, the PCI standard deviation for asphalt concrete
is assumed to be 10.
N
Interval, i = where N = total number of sample units in section
n
n = minimum number of sample units to be inspected
The sampling interval is rounded off to the smaller whole number (e.g. 3.6 is rounded to 3).
Example:
If N = 20,
Hence sample units to be inspected are 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15 and 17 (as indicated in Figure
5).
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
The table below shows a pavement condition survey for sample unit 07, section JPB-KM2 of
Jalan Parit Botak. Determine the Pavement Condition Index for this sample unit.
7.8 4.1
03 M
6.3
01 H
3.1 0.4
11 M
0.5 0.8
13 M
m = 1 + (9/98)(100 – HDV)
= 1 + (9/98)(100 – 50)
= 5.6
Since the maximum allowable number of deducts is 5.6, therefore only the first 5 and 0.6 of
the 6th deduct value are selected, i.e. 50, 32, 13, 7, 6, and 0.6*6 = 3.6.
Reduce the smallest individual deduct value to 2 (q is now 5) and determine the CDV.
10
Maximum CDV = 65
Based on the rating for PCI value of 35, this section of pavement is in very poor condition.
APPENDIX