wabash1 wrote:I have seen where the railhead was broken and was off ( missing) about a 15 inch section. but this is not as common as the vertical breaks. traffic was stopped until this rail was replaced.
Head-web separation....typically caused by a mill defect, piped rail (steel worms!) or poor railhead design (like some old 110# rail).....
Rail can fail for a whole host of internal and external reasons. Flat wheels, broken wheels and cat-tracks for instance, can nick a railhead and do-in miles of railroad. If a railcar comes into a yard with a broken wheel, the track forces will be out looking at the rail and frogs in search of nicked rail. The surviving two or three US rail mills have learned so much over the years about metalurgy and service issues that the failures due to mill practice have dropped significantly. There are still failures (like the legendary Bethlehem 136 CWR headaches on Tehachapi 15 years ago), but they are few.
Go here for my rail shots! http://www.railpictures.net/showphotos.php?userid=9296
Building the CPR Kootenay division in N scale, blog here: http://kootenaymodelrailway.wordpress.com/
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Modeling the "Fargo Area Rapid Transit" in O scale 3 rail.
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