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Percent of Grade?
Percent of Grade?
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GoleyC
Member since
August 2002
From: US
41 posts
Percent of Grade?
Posted by
GoleyC
on Thursday, August 8, 2002 1:39 PM
How does one determing the percentage of a grade?
I know that a 3-4% grade is the maximum but how does one figure this out? I would like to keep my grades at a maximum of 2 to 2-1/2%.
Thanks!
Craig
GoleyC
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, August 8, 2002 1:51 PM
Should you have an earlier addition of MR, the April 2001 copy (Back To Basics-Grades) should be helpful.
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, August 8, 2002 2:15 PM
Hi Craig,
A 3 percent grade rises or falls three feet for every 100 feet of run. So, let's say you want a 2 percent grade on your layout. It would rise or fall 1.67 inches for every 10 feet of linear run.
Here's the math: Divide 2 inches by 120 inches to get 1.66666 inches.
Formula: Divide the height by the distance (use identical increments -- feet, inches, etc.) to arrive at the gradient.
A grade that rises one foot in 12 feet is an 8.3 percent grade --way too steep except for a logging railroad. A grade that rises 1 inch in 50 inches is a 2 percent grade.
Hope this helps,
Paul Schmidt
Associate Editor
MODEL RAILROADER
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GoleyC
Member since
August 2002
From: US
41 posts
Posted by
GoleyC
on Thursday, August 8, 2002 4:15 PM
Thanks, just what I needed!
GoleyC
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Friday, August 9, 2002 12:29 AM
I think you got your math wrong. at 2% 120" (10ft) would give you 2.4" of rise or fall.
here's how I do it.
If you know the run and you want to know the rise at a certain grade then run x gradient / 100
so for a 120" run @ 2% the rise is 120" x 0.02 = 2.4"
If you know the rise and you want to know the run at a certain grade then rise / gradient x 100
so for a 2.4" rise at 2% is 2.4 / 2 x 100
= 120"
finally if you want the gradient and you have the rise and run then rise / run / 100 = gradient
so for a 2.4" rise and a 120" run you get 2.4 / 120 /100 = 2%
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Friday, August 9, 2002 10:38 AM
You're absolutely right! I divided when I should have multiplied.
Good catch and good formulas.
Paul
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