Jump to content

Talk:K-140 (Kansas highway)

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Good articleK-140 (Kansas highway) has been listed as one of the Engineering and technology good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
January 24, 2013Good article nomineeListed
Did You Know
A fact from this article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "Did you know?" column on February 24, 2013.
The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that Kansas highway K-140's route (shield pictured) was originally established in 1925 as U.S. Route 40S?

DYK nomination

GA Review

GA toolbox
Reviewing
This review is transcluded from Talk:K-140 (Kansas highway)/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: TCN7JM (talk · contribs) 22:18, 24 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]

I would love to review this article. –TCN7JM 22:18, 24 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Lead

  • "rural land between Ellsworth, Kansas and Salina, Kansas." You mentioned in the previous sentence that the highway was in Kansas, so adding the state after either city is redundant.

Route description

  • There are three instances in the first paragraph in which the citations are not in numeric order.
  • "Just after passing through Carneiro K-140..." This would read better with a comma.
  • "After traveling 1.001 miles (1.611 km) through the city of Brookville..." This seems too precise. Saying it's approximately one mile using {{convert/spell}} will suffice.
  • Refs. 1 and 2 seem to be a bit over-cited. You do not need a Google Maps citation after every sentence. One at the end of the paragraph is fine.
    • Red X Won't fix I cite after each sentence in which a source is used because I do not use the sources universally throughout paragraphs. I use ref 1 for some sentences, ref 2 for some sentences, and both for some sentences. Ks0stm (TCGE) 23:28, 24 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • "Rural farmland" is redundant.
  • First sentence in the final paragraph seems like a WP:OVERLINK violation. I don't think either pavement or concrete needs to be linked.
  • The preciseness in the traffic info...just...seems way too technical. Is it necessary for you to have high/lows for every single piece of the highway with measurements down to the hundredth of a mile? It seems like overkill.

History

Major intersections

  • No outstanding errors.

References

Final verdict

  1. It is reasonably well written.
    a (prose): b (MoS for lead, layout, word choice, fiction, and lists):
  2. It is factually accurate and verifiable.
    a (reference section): b (citations to reliable sources): c (OR):
  3. It is broad in its coverage.
    a (major aspects): b (focused):
  4. It follows the neutral point of view policy.
    Fair representation without bias:
  5. It is stable.
    No edit wars, etc.:
  6. It is illustrated by images and other media, where possible and appropriate.
    a (images are tagged and non-free content have fair use rationales): b (appropriate use with suitable captions):
    Inappropriate due to lack to images
  7. Overall: My concerns have been addressed. I feel this meets the Good Article criteria.
    Pass/Fail:
Ellsworth County PMIS Query data
Date: 07/19/2012                    2012 Distress State, Performance Level and Distress Data Listing                      Page:1
                  ( Location References are in English units and Pavement Condition Measurements are in English units. )
<-PMS Seg.ID.No.-->  LogPoint    Dis P Pr    Pv            Prof ROUGHNESS Surv    <----- FLEXIBLE DISTRESS -----> <- RIGID DISTRESS->
Co.<Route><iLP><L>   Beg. End    St  L FY RC Ty  AADT EAL  Date iriL iriR Date Rt Fc1 Fc2 Fc3 Fc4 T0 T1 T2 T3 Bc  F F1 F2 F3 J1J2J3J4
---------------------------------------------------------------|  in/mi  |-------|lin.ft{wp}/100f|-----------------|    %   |-------
                    0.406  ECL ELLSWORTH    001 - 0.580   
027(K140-0)0001(0)  0.406-1.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   781 94   5/16   93  100 4/03  _   _  19   _   _  _  _ 57  _  _  *  *  *  * * * * *
                    0.495  K140/K156        001 - 0.491   
027(K140-0)0102(0)  1.000-2.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   730 100  5/16   77   81 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _  _ 70 03  _
027(K140-0)0203(0)  2.000-3.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   730 100  5/16   79   78 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _  _ 77  _  _
027(K140-0)0304(0)  3.000-4.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   730 100  5/16   80   76 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 02 65  _  _
027(K140-0)0405(0)  4.000-5.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   745 98   5/16   71   77 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _  _ 63  _  _
                    4.014  K111/K140        004 + 0.065   
027(K140-0)0506(0)  5.000-6.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   631 96   5/16   65   68 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _  _ 40  _  _
                    5.264  RS1002           005 + 0.264   
027(K140-0)0607(0)  6.000-7.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   590 95   5/16   68   70 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 03 38  _  _
027(K140-0)0708(0)  7.000-8.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   590 95   5/16   68   68 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _  _ 50  _  _
027(K140-0)0809(0)  8.000-9.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   590 95   5/16   70   70 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 02 35  _  _
027(K140-0)0910(0)  9.000-10.000 131 2  _ 10 CO   590 95   5/16   67   67 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 02 30 03  _
027(K140-0)1011(0) 10.000-11.000 131 2  _ 10 CO   590 95   5/16   71   77 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _  _ 47 03  _
                   11.000  RS1751           011 + 0.059   
027(K140-0)1112(0) 11.000-12.000 131 2  _  9 CO   650 86   5/16   68   73 4/03  _   _  83   _   _  _  _ 48  _  _
027(K140-0)1213(0) 12.000-13.000 131 2  _  9 CO   650 86   5/16   78   68 4/03 01   _   _   _   _  _  _ 48  _  _
027(K140-0)1314(0) 13.000-14.000 131 2  _  9 CO   650 87   5/16   69   72 4/03 01   _  25   _   _  _  _ 45  _  _
                   13.931  K140/K141        014 - 0.098   
027(K140-0)1415(0) 14.000-15.000 131 2  _ 10 CO   815 92   5/16   67   79 4/03 01   _  25   _   _  _  _ 55  _  _
027(K140-0)1516(0) 15.000-16.445 131 2  _ 10 CO   940 96   5/16   72   88 4/03 01   _   _   _   _  _ 02 30  _  _
                   16.445  E CO L           016 + 0.334   
Saline County PMIS Query data
Date: 07/19/2012                    2012 Distress State, Performance Level and Distress Data Listing                      Page:1
                  ( Location References are in English units and Pavement Condition Measurements are in English units. )
<-PMS Seg.ID.No.-->  LogPoint    Dis P Pr    Pv            Prof ROUGHNESS Surv    <----- FLEXIBLE DISTRESS -----> <- RIGID DISTRESS->
Co.<Route><iLP><L>   Beg. End    St  L FY RC Ty  AADT EAL  Date iriL iriR Date Rt Fc1 Fc2 Fc3 Fc4 T0 T1 T2 T3 Bc  F F1 F2 F3 J1J2J3J4
---------------------------------------------------------------|  in/mi  |-------|lin.ft{wp}/100f|-----------------|    %   |-------
                    0.000  W CO L           017 - 0.646   
085(K140-0)0001(0)  0.000-1.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   940 97   5/16   60   62 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _  _ 45  _  _
085(K140-0)0102(0)  1.000-2.000  131 2  _ 10 CO   940 97   5/16   63   61 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _  _ 48  _  _
085(K140-0)0203(0)  2.000-3.246  121 1  _ 10 CO   940 96   5/16   62   63 4/03  _   _   _   _   _ 25  _ 25  _  _
                    3.246  WCL BROOKVILLE   020 - 0.366   
085(K140-0)0304(0)  3.246-4.267  121 1  _ 10 CO  1131 115  5/16   53   63 4/03  _   _   _   _   _ 23 03 13  _  _
                    3.573  PERRY            020 - 0.039   
                    4.267  ECL BROOKVILLE   021 - 0.332   
085(K140-0)0405(0)  4.267-5.000  121 1  _ 10 CO  1146 115  5/16   56   62 4/03  _   _   _   _   _ 03 42 Crack  _
085(K140-0)0506(0)  5.000-6.000  131 2  _ 10 CO  1145 117  5/16   54   61 4/03  _   _   _   _   _ 07 30 30  _  _
085(K140-0)0607(0)  6.000-7.000  121 1  _ 10 CO  1145 117  5/16   53   56 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 42 13  _  _
085(K140-0)0708(0)  7.000-8.000  121 1  _ 10 CO  1145 117  5/16   57   59 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 63 03  _  _
085(K140-0)0809(0)  8.000-9.000  121 1  _ 10 CO  1145 117  5/16   59   56 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 28 03  _  _
085(K140-0)0910(0)  9.000-10.000 121 1  _ 10 CO  1155 119  5/16   64   64 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 38 03  _  _  *  *  *  * * * * *
                    9.764  RS522            026 + 0.180   
085(K140-0)1011(0) 10.000-11.000 121 1  _ 10 CO  1185 129  5/16   64   67 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 37 02  _  _  *  *  *  * * * * *
085(K140-0)1112(0) 11.000-12.000 121 1  _ 10 CO  1185 129  5/16   75   74 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 42 03  _  _
085(K140-0)1213(0) 12.000-13.000 121 1  _ 10 CO  1185 129  5/16   74   66 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 20 15  _  _
085(K140-0)1314(0) 13.000-14.000 121 1  _ 10 CO  1200 128  5/16   77   73 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 52 Crack  _
                   13.764  RS1057           030 + 0.263   
085(K140-0)1415(0) 14.000-15.000 121 1  _ 10 CO   845 124  5/16   86   65 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 67 03  _  _
                   14.264  RS450            031 - 0.234   
085(K140-0)1516(0) 15.000-16.525 121 1  _ 10 CO   700 120  5/16   78   69 4/03  _   _  17   _   _  _ 60 Crack  _
085(K140-0)1616(0) 16.525-16.769 111 1  _ 10 CO  1193 139  5/16   89   92 4/03  _   _   _   _   _  _ 22 Crack  _  *  *  *  * * * * *
                   16.769  I135/K140        033 + 0.262