Rail tracks

Rail tracks

Rail tracks are used on railways (or railroads), which, together with railroad switches (or points), guide trains without the need for steering. Tracks consist of two parallel steel rails, which are laid upon sleepers (or cross ties) that are embedded in ballast to form the railroad track. The rail is fastened to the ties with rail spikes, lag screws or clips such as Pandrol clips.

The type of fastener depends partly on the type of sleeper, with spikes being used on wooden sleepers, and clips being used more on concrete sleepers.

Usually, a baseplate tie plate is used between the rail and wooden sleepers, to spread the load of the rail over a larger area of the sleeper. Sometimes spikes are driven through a hole in the baseplate to hold the rail, while at other times the baseplates are spiked or screwed to the sleeper and the rails clipped to the baseplate.

Steel rails can carry heavier loads than any other material. Railroad ties spread the load from the rails over the ground and also serve to hold the rails a fixed distance apart (called the gauge.)

Rail tracks are normally laid on a bed of coarse stone chippings known as "ballast", which combines resilience, some amount of flexibility, and good drainage. Steel rails can also be laid onto a concrete slab (a slab track). Across bridges, track is often laid on ties across longitudinal timbers (referred to as "wheeltimbers" or "waybeams") [cite web
url= http://www.mda.org.uk/railway/railobjw.htm#waybeam
title=MDA Railway Object Name Thesaurus
accessdate=2008-09-26
] or longitudinal steel girders.

Rail

Hot rolled steel in the profile of an asymmetrical I-beam is usually used as the surface on which railway wheels run ["A Metallurgical History of Railmaking" Slee, David E. Australian Railway History, February, 2004 pp43-56] . Unlike some other uses of iron and steel, railway rails are subject to very high stresses and have to be made of very high quality steel. It took many decades to improve the quality of the materials, including the change from iron to steel. For example, minor flaws in the steel that pose no problems in reinforcing rods for buildings, can, however, lead to broken rails and dangerous derailments when used on railway tracks. The heavier the rails and the rest of the trackwork, the heavier and faster the trains these tracks can carry.

Profiles of rail include:
* Bullhead rail
* Grooved rail
* Vignoles rail "(flat-bottomed rail)"
* Flanged T rail

Rail support

A railroad tie, cross tie, or railway sleeper is a rectangular object used as a base for railroad tracks. Sleepers are members generally laid transverse to the rails, on which the rails are supported and fixed, to transfer the loads from rails to the track ballast and sub grade below, and to hold the rails to the correct gauge.

Rail classification (weight)

Rail is graded by weight over a standard length. Heavier rail can support greater axle loads and higher train speeds without sustaining damage, compared to lighter rail, but at a greater cost. In North America and the UK, rail is graded in units of pounds per yard (usually just shown as 'lb'), so "130-pound rail" would weigh 130 lb per linear yard (about 64 kg/m). The usual range is 115 to 141 lbs (about 57 to about 70 kg/m). In Europe rail is graded in kg/m and the usual range is 40 to 60 kg/m (81 to 121 pounds per yard). The heaviest rail ever mass-produced was 155 pounds (about 77 kg/m) and was rolled for the Pennsylvania Railroad.

Joining rails

Rails are produced in fixed lengths and need to be joined into continuous lengths for trains to run upon.

Jointed track

There are different ways of joining rails together to form tracks. The traditional method was to bolt rails together in what is known as jointed track. In this form of track, lengths of rail, usually around 20 metres (60 ft) long, are laid and fixed to "sleepers" (UK) ("crossties", or simply "ties" in North American parlance), and are joined to other lengths of rail with steel plates known as "fishplates" (UK) or "joint bars" (N.A.).

Historically, North American railroads until the mid to late 20th century used sections of rail that measured 39 feet (11.9 m) long so they could be carried to and from a worksite in conventional gondolas, which often measured 40 feet (12.2 m) long; as car sizes increased, so did rail lengths.

Fishplates or joint bars are usually 60 centimetres (2 ft) long, and are bolted through each side of the rail ends with bolts (usually four, but sometimes up to six). On many railroads, the bolts are oppositely oriented so that in the event of a derailment and a wheel flange striking the joint, only some of the bolts will be sheared, reducing the likelihood of the rails misaligning with each other and exacerbating the seriousness of the derailment. Small gaps known as expansion joints are deliberately left between the rails to allow for expansion of the rails in hot weather. The holes through which the fishplate bolts pass are oval to allow for expansion.

British practice was always to have the rail joints on both rails adjacent to each other, while North American practice is to stagger them.

Because of the small gaps left between the rails, when trains pass over jointed tracks, they make a "clickety-clack" sound. Unless it is well maintained, jointed track does not have the ride quality of welded rail, and less desirable for high speed trains than welded rail. A major problem is cracking around the bolt holes, which can lead to the rail head breaking. This was the cause of the Hither Green rail crash which caused British Railways to begin converting much of its track to Continuous Welded Rail. However, it is still used in many countries on lower speed lines and sidings. Jointed track is still extensively used in poorer countries due to the lower construction cost and lack of modernization of their railway systems.

Insulated joints

Where track circuits exist for signalling purposes, insulated block joints are required. These compound the weakness of ordinary block joints. Specially made glued joints, where all the gaps filled with epoxy resin increases the strength again. Audio frequency track circuits replace the conventional block joint with a tuned loop which uses approximately 20 m of the rail as part of the blocking circuit. Axle counters can also reduce the number of track circuits and thus the number of insulated rail joints.

Continuous welded rail

Most modern railways use continuous welded rail (CWR), sometimes referred to as ribbon rails. In this form of track, the rails are welded together by utilising flash butt welding to form one continuous rail that may be several kilometres long, or thermite welding to repair or splice together existing CWR segments. Because there are few joints, this form of track is very strong, gives a smooth ride, and needs less maintenance. The first welded track was used in Germany in 1924 and the US in 1930 [cite web
url= http://www.arema.org/eseries/scriptcontent/custom/e_arema/library/1999_Conference_Proceedings/00059.pdf
title= Thermite Rail Welding: History, Process Developments, Current Practices And Outlook For The 21st Century
accessdate= 2008-07-06
author= C. P. Lonsdale
year= 1999
month= September
format= PDF
work= Proceedings of the AREMA 1999 Annual Conferences
publisher= The American Railway Engineering and Maintenance-of-Way Association
pages= 2
language= English
] and has become common on main lines since the 1950s.

Flash butt welding is the preferred process which involves an automated track laying machine running a strong electrical current through the touching ends of two unjoined pieces of rail. The ends become white hot due to electrical resistance and are then pressed together forming a strong weld. Thermite welding is a manual process requiring a reaction crucible and form to contain the molten iron. Thermite-bonded joints are also seen as less reliable and more prone to fracture or break.

Because of the increased strength of welded track, trains can travel on it at higher speeds and with less friction. Welded rails are more expensive to lay than jointed tracks, but have much lower maintenance costs.

Rails expand in hot weather and shrink in cold weather. Because welded track has very few expansion joints, if no special measures are taken it could become distorted in hot weather and cause a derailment (a condition known in North America as sun kink, and in Britain as buckling). In North America a rail broken due to cold-related contraction is known as a "pull-apart".

To avoid this, welded rails are laid on concrete or steel sleepers, which are so heavy they hold the rails firmly in place. Great attention is paid to compacting the ballast effectively, particularly the shoulder over the ends of the sleepers, to prevent them from moving. Even so, in extreme weather, foot patrols monitor sections of track known to be problematic.

After new segments of rail are laid, or defective rails replaced (welded in), the rails are artificially stressed. The stressing process involves either heating the rails causing them to expand, [cite web| url=http://www.grandadsez.co.uk/railways/continuous-rail.html| title=Continuous Welded Rail| work=Grandad Sez: Grandad's Railway Engineering Section| accessdate=2006-06-12| ] or stretching the rails with hydraulic equipment. They are then fastened (clipped) to the sleepers in their expanded form. This process ensures that the rail will not expand much further in subsequent hot weather. In cold weather the rails try to contract, but because they are firmly fastened, cannot do so. In effect, stressed rails are a bit like a piece of stretched elastic firmly fastened down.

Engineers try to heat the rail to a temperature roughly midway between the average extremes of hot and cold (this is known as the 'rail neutral temperature'). If temperatures reach outside normal ranges however, welded rail can buckle in a hotter than usual summer or can actually break in a colder than anticipated winter. In North America, because broken rails are typically detected by the signaling system; they are seen as less of a problem than heat kinks which are not detected. For this reason, and because it is harder to break a rail than displace the trackbed, CWR is usually installed at a temperature of convert|90|F, to cope with rail temperature extremes of nearly convert|120|F in the summer sun.

Joints are used in continuously welded rail when necessary; instead of a joint that passes straight across the rail, producing a loud noise and shock when the wheels pass over it, two sections of rail are sometimes cut at a steep angle and put together with a gap between them - a breather switch (referred to in Britain as an expansion joint). This gives a much smoother transition yet still provides some expansion room.

Fixing rail to ties

There are several methods used to fasten rail to wooden ties. The worldwide standard type of rail used today is "flat-bottomed rail" (Vignoles rail), which has a flat base and can stand upright without support. A flat-bottomed rail has a cross-section like that of an upside-down 'T' and is usually held to the sleeper with a tie plate (baseplate), a metal plate attached to the sleeper; although for lower cost construction flat bottom rails can be laid directly onto the sleepers.

Modern sleepers can be made of reinforced concrete and pressed steel, with rubber pads inserted between the sleeper and rail. This is done for two reasons: to give a smoother ride and to prevent the sleeper from shorting the track circuit, a low voltage passed through the rails for signalling purposes. This is different from a "traction current," which powers electric trains.

Spikes

A rail spike is a large nail with an offset head that is used to secure rails or fishplates (or baseplates) to ties in the track. Spikes are driven into wooden ties either by hammering them with a spike hammer by hand, or in an automated fashion with a spiker.

Spikes are cheaper and simpler to install than other methods but can loosen if the tie rots, much more easily than the British chair (a type of baseplate) does. An alternate method is the use of large wood screws, also called lag screws.

Chairs

In traditional British practice, cast metal "chairs" were screwed to the sleepers, which took a style of rail known as "bullhead" that was somewhat figure-8 in cross-section — wider at top and bottom (known as the "head" and "foot" respectively) and smaller in the middle (the "web"). "Keys" (wedges of wood or sprung steel) were then driven in between chair and rail to hold it in place. This was common practice on British railways until the 1950s, but is now largely obsolete [ [http://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/docSummary.php?docID=281 railwaysarchive.co.uk] ] .

The idea behind "bullhead" rails was that because both the top and bottom of the rails were the same shape, when one side of the rail became worn, the rail could be turned over to the unused side, thus extending the rail's lifespan. However the bottom head turned out to get dented, rendering the original idea useless. Since the turnover requirement was no longer needed, "bullhead" rails came to have a flat base (narrower than flat-bottomed rail), and the top part has curved edges that fit the profile of the train wheels.

Clips

A variety of different types of heavy-duty clips are used to fasten the rails to the underlying baseplate, one common one being the "Pandrol" fastener (Pandrol clip), named after its maker, which is shaped like a sturdy, stubby paperclip. [http://www.pandrol.com/] , [http://www.pandroluk.com/casestudies/prj31_bdy.htm] and [http://www.scalefour.org/resources/images/Pandrol1.jpg] . Another one is the Vossloh Tension Clamp. [http://www.vossloh-fastening-systems.de/fs_cms/en/index.html]

Sleeperless track

In recent years, methods have been developed to put tracks on concrete without using conventional sleepers or track ballast. While this method's construction cost is high, this system is expected to have significantly lower maintenance cost than conventional tracks. It is mainly used on high-speed lines and in tunnels, where maintenance access is difficult and where the track is subject to fewer climatic stresses (such as rain and temperature fluctuation).

See Tubular Modular Track.

Track maintenance

Track needs regular maintenance to remain in good order, especially when high-speed trains are involved. Inadequate maintenance may lead to a "slow order" (North American terminology, a "slack" or speed restriction in the United Kingdom) being imposed to avoid accidents (see Slow zone). Track maintenance was at one time hard manual labour, requiring teams of labourers (US: gandy dancers, UK: platelayers or navvies), who used levers to force rails back into place on steep turns, correcting the gradual shifting caused by the centripetal force of passing trains. Currently, maintenance is facilitated by a variety of specialised machines.

The profile of the track is maintained by using a railgrinder.

Common maintenance jobs include spraying ballast with weedkiller to prevent weeds growing through and disrupting the ballast. This is typically done with a special weed killing train.Over time, ballast is crushed or moved by the weight of trains passing over it, and periodically it needs to be levelled (tamped) and eventually cleaned or replaced. If this is not done, the tracks may become uneven causing swaying, rough riding and derailments.

Rail Inspections utilize nondestructive testing methods to detect internal flaws in the rails. This is done by using specially equipped HiRail trucks, inspection cars, or in some cases handheld inspection devices.

Rails must be replaced before the railhead profile wears to a degree that may trigger a derailment. Worn mainline rails usually have sufficient life to be used in branch line, siding or stub use and are "cascaded" to those applications.

The environmental conditions along railroad track create a unique ecosystem. This is particularly so in the United Kingdom where steam locomotives are no longer used and vegetation has not been trimmed back so thoroughly. This, however, creates a problem for steam-hauled "heritage" trains in prolonged dry weather.

Gauge

During the early days of rail there was considerable variation in the gauge used by different systems. Today, sixty percent of the world's railways use a gauge of RailGauge|1435, which is known as the standard or international gauge. Gauges wider than standard gauge are called broad gauge, those smaller than standard narrow gauge. Some stretches of track are dual gauge, with three (or sometimes four) parallel rails in place of the usual two, to allow trains of two different gauges to share the same track. [cite web|url=http://finance.groups.yahoo.com/group/1520mm/message/90710|title=message in the mailing list '1520mm' on Р75 rails]

U.S. track classes

In the United States, the Federal Railroad Administration has developed a system of classification for track quality. [cite web
url= http://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/safety/tss_compliance_manual_chapter_5_final_040107.pdf
title= Federal Railroad Administration Track Safety Standards Compliance Manual, Chapter 5 Federal Railroad Administration Track Safety Standards Compliance Manual
accessdate= 2008-04-21
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publisher= United States Government
pages= 155
language= English
doi=
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] [

cite web
url= http://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/safety/track_compliance_manual/TCM%206.PDF
title= Federal Railroad Administration Track Safety Standards Compliance Manual, Chapter 6 Federal Railroad Administration Track Safety Standards Compliance Manual
accessdate= 2008-04-21
accessdaymonth=
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] The class a track is placed in determines speed limits and the ability to run passenger trains.

* "Excepted track". Only freight trains are allowed to operate on this type of trackage, and they may run at speeds up to 10 mph (16 km/h). Also, no more than five cars loaded with hazardous material may be operated within any single train. Passenger trains of any type are prohibited.
* Class 1 track is the lowest class allowing the operation of passenger trains. Freight train speeds are still limited to 10 mph (16 km/h), and passenger trains are restricted to 15 mph (24 km/h).
* Class 2 track limits freight trains to convert|25|mph|abbr=on and passenger trains to convert|30|mph|abbr=on.
* Class 3 track limits freight trains to convert|40|mph|abbr=on and passenger trains to convert|60|mph|abbr=on.
* Class 4 track limits freight trains to convert|60|mph|abbr=on and passenger trains to convert|80|mph|abbr=on.
**Most track, especially that owned by major railroads is class 4 trackFact|date=July 2008.
* Class 5 track limits freight trains to convert|80|mph|abbr=on and passenger trains to convert|90|mph|abbr=on.
**The only Class 5 track operated by a freight railroad are parts of the BNSF Railway Chicago–Los Angeles mainline, the old Santa Fe main, upon which ATS equipped passenger trains such as Amtrak's Southwest Chief can operate at up to convert|90|mph|abbr=on. This is gradually being reduced to Class 4 as the train stop system is retired.Fact|date=May 2008
* Class 6 limits freight trains and passenger trains to convert|110|mph|abbr=on.
* Class 7 limits all trains to convert|125|mph|abbr=on.
**Most of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor is Class 7 trackage.Fact|date=May 2008
* Class 8 limits all trains to convert|160|mph|abbr=on.
**Portions of the Northeast Corridor are the only Class 8 trackage in North America allowing for convert|135|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on and convert|150|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on operation.Fact|date=May 2008
* Class 9 trackage limits all trains to convert|200|mph|abbr=on.
**There is currently no Class 9 trackage.

In addition to class, maximum track speed is also subject to specific regulatory restrictions known as rules. The rule governing the maximum permissible speed of a train operating on curved track is determined by the following formula::V_{max}=sqrt{frac{E_a + 3}{0.0007d

where E_a is the amount in inches that the outside rail is superelevated above the inside rail on a curve and d is the degree of curvature in degrees per convert|100|ft|m. V_{max} is given in miles per hour.

Track unbalanced superelevation in the U.S. is restricted to convert|3|in|mm, though convert|4|in|mm is permissible by waiver. There is no hard maximum set for European railways, some of which have curves with over convert|11|in|mm of unbalanced superelevation to permit high-speed transportation. [cite web|url=http://Zierke.com/shasta_route/pages/05curve-curve.html|title=Comparison of upgrades needs to recognize the difference in curve speeds|last=Zierke|first=Hans-Joachim |accessdate=2008-04-10]

Generally the aim is for trains to run without flange contact, which also depends on the tyre profile of the wheels. Allowance has to be made for the different speeds of trains. Slower trains will tend to make flange contact with the inner rail on curves, while faster trains will tend to ride outwards and make contact with the outer rail. Either creates wear and may lead to derailment. Many high speed lines do not permit the use of slower freight trains, particularly with heavier axle loads. In some cases, problems are alleviated by the use of flange lubrication.

Other types

In the early years of railways, there was much experimentation with rails and sleepers and fixtures, before the better designs emerged.

Wooden rails with a metal strap on top was tried to save costs, but the straps had a tendency to come loose and penetrate the carriages going over them. These were commonly known as "snakeheads".

"Pole Roads" were used in past American logging operations in place of the more expensive standard railroad. They consisted of wooden poles laid end to end and parallel to each other in place of the steel rails. Locomotives and rolling stock on pole roads used concave wheels (double flanged) as opposed to the single flange used on most railway lines. Fordson tractors were often converted into pole road locomotives. The major setback to these lines was that the primitive (often home-made) locomotives tended to derail on curves.

The "flangeway" was an early type of railway, the rails of which were equipped with a flange, while the locomotives and rolling stock that ran on it had wheels with plain rims. However switches/turnouts were very primitive, and high speeds could not be achieved, thus leading to the demise of the flangeway and the rise of today's "edgeway".

Barlow rail had a wide cross section to spread the load, but the rail itself tended to spread and go out of gauge. [ Light Railways October 2007 p13 ] There are some examples in the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney. [ [http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3513584 Digital Collections - Pictures - Lyell, Andrew R. Barlow rail [on the Geelong - Melbourne line [Victoria, shilling [piece being used as size contrast, 1930 - 19... ] ] [ [http://www.dhub.org/object/212220,length Originally intended to rest directly on the ballast.] ]

Brunel's Great Western Railway used longitudinal sleepers, with piles to hold the track down, but as the earthworks settled, the piles came to hold the track up. "Bridge Rail" was originally used; this is somewhat similar to Barlow rail mentioned above, only squarer and perhaps thicker. [ [http://disused-rlys.fotopic.net/p29151647.html Thame. Sections of GWR bridge rail covering a lineside drain at the eastern end of the station site. 11th May 2006. OS: SP715051 :: 077_Thame_110506b.jpg.jpg ] ]

See also

References

Further reading

* Pike, J., (2001), "Track", Sutton Publishing, ISBN 0-7509-2692-9
* Firuziaan, M. and Estorff, O., (2002), "Simulation of the Dynamic Behavior of Bedding-Foundation-Soil in the Time Domain", Springer Verlag.

External links

* [http://www.akrailroad.com/tee_rail_data.html Table of North American tee rail (flat bottom) sections]
* [http://www.oberbauhandbuch.de/en/oberbauhandbuch/oberbaustoffe/schienen/vignolschienen.html ThyssenKrupp handbook, Vignoles rail]
* [http://www.oberbauhandbuch.de/en/oberbauhandbuch/oberbaustoffe/schienen/vignolschienen-feldbahnschienen.html ThyssenKrupp handbook, Light Vignoles rail]
* [http://www.scalefour.org/resources/track.htm Track Details in photographs]


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