Lecture 2 - The Track System
Lecture 2 - The Track System
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The track system and its components … The track system and its components …
The superstructure;
The superstructure consists of:
Supports and distributes train loads and;
The ballast, usually; crushed stone and
Maintenance and replacement
gravel (exceptional cases).
The superstructure consists of:
ballast ensures adequate load
The rails, support and guide the train
distribution and fast drainage of rainwater
wheels
The sleepers (also called ties, North
America) with their fastenings, distribute
the loads applied to the rails and keep
them at a constant spacing
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The track system and its components … The track system and its components …
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The track system and its components … The track system and its components …
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Rail Profiles
Grooved rail (Fig. 2.4) is used along tracks
where the rail top and the pavement
surface are at the same level
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The track system and its components …
Rail Profiles
The rail profile currently widely used is the
rail with base, also known as the flat bottom
rail (Fig. 2.5)
The cross-sections of standard gauge rails
have been standardized by the
International Union of Railways (UIC -
French: Union Internationale des Chemins de
fer)
Fig. 2.4: Grooved rail
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See UIC rail profiles in Fig. 2.6 & 2.7
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The track system and its components …
Choice of Rail Profile
The choice should take into account the
following parameters:
Speed
Axle load
Traffic of the track
Sleeper spacing
Lifetime and
Eventual reuse
Fig. 2.7: Rail Profiles for Metric and Broad Gauge Tracks
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The track system and its components … The track system and its components …
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The track system and its components … The track system and its components …
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Track Gauge
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Fig. 2.9: Rail/baseplate & baseplate/sleeper pads
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Track Gauge … Axle Load and Traffic Load
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Axle Load and Traffic Load … Axle Load and Traffic Load…
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Axle Load and Traffic Load… Axle Load and Traffic Load…
Traffic Load
Axle Load
On a track, various kinds of rail vehicles are
Rail fatigue is an exponential function of the running, passenger vehicles, freight vehicles,
axle load Q locomotives.
Thus, any increase in the axle load results Railway engineering uses the analogue of the
in a much larger increase in track material passenger vehicle unit (PVU) of traffic
fatigue engineering.
To determine the traffic load (or tonnage) on a
track, the loads of the various trains are first
converted into equivalent passenger train loads
and then speeds are also taken into account.
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Sleeper Spacing … Sleeper Spacing …
1,666 sleepers per kilometre of track is The study of track behaviour has shown that;
taken as the average value The closer the sleepers are spaced, the
In railways with higher values of axle load better the load distribution and the smaller
(e.g., the USA), sleeper spacing may be the stresses developed.
reduced to 0.50m As sleeper spacing is made smaller,
however, track maintenance becomes more
difficult
A compromise should therefore be found
between the above two requirements
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