Stopping Sight Distance (SSD) – Formula, PIEV Theory & Solved Examples

What is Stopping Sight Distance (SSD)?

Stopping Sight Distance (SSD) is the minimum length of road visible ahead that allows a driver to spot an obstacle and bring the vehicle to a complete stop before reaching it. Every road, regardless of class or terrain, must be designed to provide at least this much visibility at every point.

It is also called Absolute Minimum Sight Distance or Non-Passing Sight Distance. SSD represents the most basic safety requirement in highway design.

Stopping Sight Distance SSD diagram with lag distance and braking distance
Figure 1: Components of Stopping Sight Distance — Lag Distance + Braking Distance

Components of SSD

SSD is the sum of two distances:

1. Lag Distance

This is the distance the vehicle travels during the driver’s total reaction time (from seeing the obstacle to applying brakes).

Lag Distance = 0.278 × V × t_r

Where V = speed in kmph, t_r = reaction time in seconds. As per IRC, t_r = 2.5 seconds for SSD calculations.

2. Braking Distance

This is the distance the vehicle travels after brakes are applied until the vehicle comes to a complete halt. It is derived by equating kinetic energy with work done by friction.

Braking Distance = V² / (254 × f)

Where f = longitudinal coefficient of friction (IRC recommends 0.35 to 0.40 depending on speed).

PIEV Theory – Reaction Time Explained

Reaction time is not instantaneous. It is broken down into four distinct phases under the PIEV Theory:

PhaseFull FormDescription
PPerceptionTime for the signal to travel from eyes/ears to the brain via nervous system
IIntellectionTime for the brain to process and understand the situation
EEmotionTime consumed by emotional disturbance or fear
VVolitionTime taken to make a decision and initiate the braking action

The total PIEV time as prescribed by IRC for SSD is 2.5 seconds.

SSD Formula – All Three Cases

Case 1: Flat Ground (No Gradient)

SSD = 0.278 × V × t_r + V² / (254 × f)

Case 2: Upward Gradient (+n%)

SSD = 0.278 × V × t_r + V² / [254 × (f + n/100)]

Case 3: Downward Gradient (–n%)

SSD = 0.278 × V × t_r + V² / [254 × (f − n/100)]

General combined form: SSD = 0.278Vt_r + V² / [254(f ± 0.01n)]

Factors Affecting SSD

  • Total Reaction Time: Higher reaction time → larger SSD required
  • Vehicle Speed: Higher speed → both lag distance and braking distance increase
  • Braking Efficiency: IRC assumes 50% efficiency in calculations
  • Road Gradient: Downhill → longer SSD; uphill → shorter SSD
  • Friction Coefficient: Higher friction → shorter braking distance

IRC Recommendations for SSD

  • On a single-lane two-way road: minimum SSD = 2 × SSD (for equal speeds)
  • On a two-lane undivided highway: gradient effect is generally not considered
  • On a divided highway: gradient must be factored into SSD
  • SSD on vertical curves: based on driver eye height of 1.2 m and object height of 0.15 m

Solved Example

Problem: A highway descends at 4% gradient. Design speed = 80 km/hr. Driver reaction time = 2.5 sec. Skid resistance = 0.70 (actual), brake efficiency = 50%. Find SSD for (i) two-way traffic on a 2-lane road (ii) two-way traffic on a single-lane road.

Solution:

Effective f = brake efficiency × actual skid resistance = 0.5 × 0.70 = 0.35

SSD = 0.278 × 80 × 2.5 + (80)² / [254 × (0.35 − 0.04)]

SSD = 55.6 + 6400 / (254 × 0.31) = 55.6 + 81.28 = 136.88 m

For single lane two-way: SSD = 2 × 136.88 = 273.76 m

Key Takeaways

  • SSD = Lag Distance + Braking Distance
  • IRC reaction time = 2.5 s | Friction f = 0.35–0.40
  • Downhill increases SSD; uphill decreases it
  • Single-lane 2-way road needs double the SSD
  • Always assume 50% brake efficiency unless stated otherwise

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