Speed Cushions
How Do Speed Tables Work? 2026 Engineering Explainer
Cojo
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A speed table works by spreading vertical deflection across a 22-foot footprint instead of the 1-to-14-foot footprint of a speed bump or speed hump. The longer ramp lengths produce gentler grade changes for any given height, which slows passenger cars without abruptly jolting buses, fire engines, and ambulances. The Federal Highway Administration's Traffic Calming ePrimer Module 3.3 and the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) Traffic Calming Manual, Chapter 3, document the underlying engineering.
Vertical deflection traffic-calming devices slow vehicles by forcing the suspension to compress and decompress as wheels traverse a raised section of pavement. The compression event has two parameters that drivers respond to:
A speed bump compresses the entire deflection into 1 to 3 feet of pavement, producing a sharp grade change and a brief but uncomfortable jolt. Drivers slow because the jolt is unpleasant.
A speed hump spreads the deflection across 12 to 14 feet, producing a moderate grade change and a longer-duration but smoother deflection. Drivers slow because the deflection takes long enough that maintaining speed feels uncontrolled.
A speed table spreads the deflection across 22 feet, producing the gentlest grade change and the longest-duration deflection. Drivers slow because the device length forces sustained deceleration. Larger vehicles (buses, fire engines) experience the gentle grade change as a barely perceptible bump rather than the abrupt jolt of a hump or bump.
When a passenger car approaches a 22-foot speed table:
Total time on device at 20 mph: roughly 0.75 seconds. The longer-duration deflection is why drivers slow despite the gentle grade change.
When a transit bus approaches the same speed table:
Bus delay across a speed table is typically 2 to 4 seconds, compared with 6 to 10 seconds across a speed hump and 8 to 14 seconds across a speed bump. ITE Traffic Calming Manual Chapter 3 documents these delay differences, and the Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Report 145 on bus operating environment provides corroborating data.
A Type 1 fire engine has roughly 200 inch wheelbase, similar to a transit bus. Behavior across a speed table closely mirrors the bus case: long wheelbase distributes load across the device, gentle grade change produces minimal vertical jolt, response-time delay stays under 4 seconds per table.
The USFA Emergency Vehicle Safety Initiative documentation supports speed tables as the most fire-friendly vertical-deflection traffic-calming device after speed cushions. Tables are sometimes preferred over cushions where pedestrian crossings are the dominant design driver, because the table's full-lane width naturally accommodates a marked crosswalk on the flat top.
ITE Traffic Calming Manual Chapter 3 documents typical speed table before-and-after speed studies as showing:
These numbers are competitive with speed humps (22 to 40% speed reduction) but with materially less bus and emergency-vehicle delay.
The 22-foot total length is what allows long-wheelbase vehicles (buses, fire trucks) to span the device with weight on multiple axle positions simultaneously. A 12-to-14-foot speed hump compresses the deflection into a footprint shorter than the bus wheelbase, so all weight transfers through the suspension across a shorter pavement distance. The longer table footprint distributes the loading and reduces peak suspension compression on long-wheelbase vehicles.
The ITE 22-foot specification was set explicitly to accommodate transit-bus and fire-apparatus wheelbases. For dimensional detail see speed table dimensions.
Three profile variations change the speed-reduction and ride-quality numbers:
| Profile | Speed reduction | Bus delay | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard parabolic | 18-22 mph 85th-percentile | 2-4 sec/table | Default residential design |
| Sinusoidal | 20-25 mph 85th-percentile | under 3 sec/table | Smoother for transit, EMS |
| Flat-top with marked crosswalk | 15-20 mph | 2-4 sec/table | Doubles as pedestrian device |
For design recommendations see best speed tables for residential streets.
Speed tables fail to produce expected speed reduction in three scenarios:
In April 2025 Cojo installed three sinusoidal-profile asphalt speed tables on a Eugene neighborhood greenway. Eugene-Springfield Fire Department reviewed the sinusoidal profile at design stage and confirmed apparatus delay would stay under 3 seconds per table at code-3 response. Post-install radar speed studies confirmed 85th-percentile speed reduction from 31 mph to 21 mph. The corridor's three-table configuration with 350-foot spacing meant drivers couldn't re-accelerate to baseline between devices, which is what produced the corridor-wide speed reduction.
Always verify current requirements with your local jurisdiction. This article reflects May 2026 published guidance.
Cojo designs and installs speed tables across the Oregon I-5 corridor. We coordinate the city traffic-calming application packet, field survey, paving, traffic control, and pavement marking in one scope. For dimensional detail see speed table dimensions, and for transit-corridor specifications see speed tables on bus routes. For Eugene-area installs see Speed Table Installation Eugene or pair the install with our asphalt maintenance services. Get a custom quote.
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