schmism
Super Member
the reason why culvert sizes change over time is because the amount of water the ditch carries changes over time. usually it carries more... not less..
why?
there is this thing called "time of concentration". its basicly how long it takes the water to flow off the ground and "into" the ditch.
as you devolope more land, convert more land from woods to "cleared property" the water runs off faster. SO
water USED to run into the ditch at a rate of X (cfs) the ditch (and culverts) were designed to carry the water away at X rate.
Now as develompent occures the water runs off quicker.. now you have water entering the ditch at 2X but the ditch can only carry it away at X. then you have issues.... (this is why major subdivsions are required to have retention ponds... a place to collect the water at 2x and allow it out into the "old" ditch at X rate... so durring times of high rainfall, it fills up quick, and slowly drains out)
so the culvert sized was increased and some time in the future they will come out and re-dig the ditches.
again most drainage calcs use a rain fall intenisty # (50 year rain etc) so that number will also change as they re-calc those numbers based on the last 50 or 100 years vs the 50 year number that was used in 1960.
so yes the ditch may have lived there for 80 years, but the engineering behind the size of the ditch changes over time based on a WHOLE lot of things. (not to mention arbitray changes in design specs like min slopes, etc)
as for who do you ask? your local DOT does not maintain all roads/ditches. Those in a city or under "county" maintaince do not fall into the DOT supervision and therefore the DOT engineer is likely to give you 'Thats not my problem" kind of answer ( in other words "Check with the county/city people, i dont have that information")
why?
there is this thing called "time of concentration". its basicly how long it takes the water to flow off the ground and "into" the ditch.
as you devolope more land, convert more land from woods to "cleared property" the water runs off faster. SO
water USED to run into the ditch at a rate of X (cfs) the ditch (and culverts) were designed to carry the water away at X rate.
Now as develompent occures the water runs off quicker.. now you have water entering the ditch at 2X but the ditch can only carry it away at X. then you have issues.... (this is why major subdivsions are required to have retention ponds... a place to collect the water at 2x and allow it out into the "old" ditch at X rate... so durring times of high rainfall, it fills up quick, and slowly drains out)
so the culvert sized was increased and some time in the future they will come out and re-dig the ditches.
again most drainage calcs use a rain fall intenisty # (50 year rain etc) so that number will also change as they re-calc those numbers based on the last 50 or 100 years vs the 50 year number that was used in 1960.
so yes the ditch may have lived there for 80 years, but the engineering behind the size of the ditch changes over time based on a WHOLE lot of things. (not to mention arbitray changes in design specs like min slopes, etc)
as for who do you ask? your local DOT does not maintain all roads/ditches. Those in a city or under "county" maintaince do not fall into the DOT supervision and therefore the DOT engineer is likely to give you 'Thats not my problem" kind of answer ( in other words "Check with the county/city people, i dont have that information")