Loose chippings
Loose chippings are loose gravel or stone fragments on a road surface and form a hazard to vehicles using that road. It may come from the road's chip seal. Causes include:
- Unbound surplus aggregate not removed from the surface when the road is resurfaced.
- of a chip seal or asphalt concrete pavement. This is usually the result of a poor bond between the asphalt and the aggregate. As a result, the aggregate breaks free from the road surface.
- Raveling caused by mechanical wear from snowplows or studded snow tires.
- Gravel deposited on the road by erosion of cut sections above the road.
- Gravel carried onto the road by tyres of a vehicle that was driven onto a gravel shoulder, or entered a paved road from a gravel road.
Loose chippings may accumulate on verges, where they may choke drainage channels.
In many countries, road signs are put up, requiring vehicles to drive at a low speed. In the UK, these temporary traffic signs will require the driver to proceed at 20 mph.