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Harper's Ferry derailment

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Monday, December 23, 2019 3:42 PM

References on the history of the Harpers Ferry bridges: 

http://www.wvculture.org/shpo/nr/pdf/jefferson/78001484.pdf - Nomination Form for National Register of Historic Places Inventory, a really detailed explanation.

The short version - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B_%26_O_Railroad_Potomac_River_Crossing 

- PDN. 

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Monday, December 23, 2019 3:33 PM

I tried to determine the radius of the curve from a large-scale (1" = 20') print of it from Google Maps Satellite View.  However, there's the apparent kink I noted previously just before leaving the bridge in a SW directon, and then a flat spot just after arriving on 'dry land' opposite the angle in the adjacent Appalachian Trail walkway (which is to the SE).  Those are likely distortions from Google Maps, not real-life track configurations.  As a result, I would not put much faith in any curve radius determination based on the Google Maps Satellite View.

That said - and having read a little about the history of track relocations in this area over the years - as I said before, it could be 12 to 15 degrees, and I'm now leaning more towards the 15 - 16 degree range.  Although it may be termed a "main track", it's more like a secondary/ branch line.  Such curves - while certainly not desirable - may be a result of history and a present-day fact of life for the railroads that have inherited them and must still operate over them today.

- PDN.

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Monday, December 23, 2019 3:11 PM

Lithonia Operator
Thanks, Paul.

If I understand correctly, "degree of curvature" is how tight a curve is. Is there a term for simply how much (in degrees) a single curve changes the direction of the rail line (regardless of the radius)?

Which begs the question: are any curves in railroading either increasing-radius or decreasing-radius ones. (Both of those commonly exist on roads and auto racing tracks.) Or are they all constant-radius curves? Most would be connected by tangents; but, say, a crossover would be two curves end to end, one a left and the other a right, or vice versa.

Tyhe answer to your first question is "central angle", often called in shorthand the "delta" in my experience here on the East Coast - may be other terms for it both here and elsewhere.  It's one of the 4 best mathematical values of which any two will define a curve - the other 3 being degree of curve, radius, or length - either arc or by chords (to a lesser extent the tangent, long chord, or external will also suffice).  

Low speed curves with little or no superelevation are often nominally a constant-radius curve, although as a practical matter the stiffness of the rails imparts a little spiral at the ends.

Spiral is the universal term for the increasing radius and decreasing radius curves, which are used mainly for higher speed tracks, those with sharper curves, or where a lot of superelevation is needed.  Usually the radius at the beginning of the curve is infinite = tangent, then it gets progressively sharper until it matches the constant-radius part.  Aside from easing into the curve, one important reason is to be able to gradually increase the supelevation from 0" on the tangent to the proper value in the body of the curve.  The details of all this are beyond the scope of this forum, and take up chapters in books on route or track alignment/ surveying and professional papers.  Despite this being a relatively settled field, some of these are surprisingly recent - e.g., A Better Way to Design Railroad Transition Spirals by Louis T. Klauder Jr., PhD, PE., (c) 2001 by Louis T. Klauder, Jr., can be found at https://www.arema.org/files/comm/c17/Milwaukee_22.PDF ) 

For most crossovers the short segment of track between the frogs of the respective turnouts are tangent.  However, there are some situations where the turnout/ frog numbers are not identical - say, a No. 12 in one track, and a No. 10 in the other - where a small curve must be introduced so the alignment is continuous and smooth; that can also happen where the tracks have an angle spreading apart, and other unusual configurations. 

- PDN. 

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, December 23, 2019 12:28 PM

Lithonia Operator
Thanks, Paul.

If I understand correctly, "degree of curvature" is how tight a curve is. Is there a term for simply how much (in degrees) a single curve changes the direction of the rail line (regardless of the radius)?

Which begs the question: are any curves in railroading either increasing-radius or decreasing-radius ones. (Both of those commonly exist on roads and auto racing tracks.) Or are they all constant-radius curves? Most would be connected by tangents; but, say, a crossover would be two curves end to end, one a left and the other a right, or vice versa.

Regardless of increasing or decreasing radius of the curves - the speed restriction for that segment of track will be set by the requirements of the sharpest of the curves.

As a race driver you want to maximize your speed to the limit of each segment of a curve - no matter if that particular segment is increasing or decreasing in its radius.  On the railroad one speed fits all and that limit applies to the entire length of the train.

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Posted by MMLDelete on Monday, December 23, 2019 11:58 AM

7j43k

 

 
Lithonia Operator

Which begs the question: are any curves in railroading either increasing-radius or decreasing-radius ones. (Both of those commonly exist on roads and auto racing tracks.) Or are they all constant-radius curves?

 

 

Most/all mainline curves include increasing-radius and decreasing radius curves.  They are called "easements".

 

 

 

Most would be connected by tangents; but, say, a crossover would be two curves end to end, one a left and the other a right, or vice versa.

 

 

 

A crossover track is NOT two curves end to end.  The curves are all incorporated in the closure rails, which run between the points and the frog.  Between the two frogs, all the track is normally straight.

 

Ed

 

Thanks, Ed. I've learned a lot today.

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Posted by 7j43k on Monday, December 23, 2019 11:52 AM

Lithonia Operator

Which begs the question: are any curves in railroading either increasing-radius or decreasing-radius ones. (Both of those commonly exist on roads and auto racing tracks.) Or are they all constant-radius curves?

Most/all mainline curves include increasing-radius and decreasing radius curves.  They are called "easements".

 

Most would be connected by tangents; but, say, a crossover would be two curves end to end, one a left and the other a right, or vice versa.

 

A crossover track is NOT two curves end to end.  The curves are all incorporated in the closure rails, which run between the points and the frog.  Between the two frogs, all the track is normally straight.

 

Ed

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Posted by MMLDelete on Monday, December 23, 2019 11:01 AM

Thanks, Paul.

If I understand correctly, "degree of curvature" is how tight a curve is. Is there a term for simply how much (in degrees) a single curve changes the direction of the rail line (regardless of the radius)?

Which begs the question: are any curves in railroading either increasing-radius or decreasing-radius ones. (Both of those commonly exist on roads and auto racing tracks.) Or are they all constant-radius curves? Most would be connected by tangents; but, say, a crossover would be two curves end to end, one a left and the other a right, or vice versa.

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Posted by tree68 on Monday, December 23, 2019 10:55 AM

Paul_D_North_Jr
A quick look at the Multimodalways archive didn't find any track charts for this area under either B&O or CSX archives, but I could have missed it. 

I did a web search under several terms and came up with zilch as well.  That would be the ultimate resource, however.

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Monday, December 23, 2019 9:24 AM

Lithonia Operator
Someone please enlighten me regarding terminology About track curvature.

This I how I understand it:

A 300' radius curve, if continued around 360 degrees to form a circle, that circle would have diameter of 600'. Which would be a very tight railroad curve. Correct?

A 5-degree curve, in the space of 100 ft, will change direction by 5 degrees. Correct?

Correct on the first. 

On the second: For railroads, the 100.00 ft. is measured on a chord - the actual arc distance is a little more (depends on how sharp the curve is).

For highways and other general civil engineering applications, the 100.00 ft. is measured along the arc/ curve (the chord distance is a little less). 

(There's a difference between 100 and 100.00 feet, so I'm respecting that.) 

Above applies to North American practice (and likely S. America, too); not familiar with the details of how it's done in other parts of the world.  

Separately - sometimes a good way to figure out the degree (radius) of a curve is:

1. Extend the two tangents to where they intersect near the middle of the curve.

2. Measure the angle with a protractor - angles are not subject to the same kinds of scaling error, just interpolation.

3. Measure the distance from the same points as you meaured the angle with the protractor.  This should be measured along the curve, not the 'shortcut' (chord) between the ends. This is subject to scaling error, but as a much smaller percentage. 

4. Divide angle from 2 above by the distance from 3 above to obtain the angle turned in each 100 ft. = degree of curve. NOTE: This is crude enough that it doesn't matter whether you want the chord definition (railroad) or arc definition (highway) - it's not precise enough to differentiate between them.  Said another way, it's approximate for either one.  

5. Divide 5,730 by the degree of curve to get the radius in feet (same note applies). 

Just from looking at the Google Maps Satellite View - the nominal "50 ft." bar scale, about 1" = 75' on my computer monitor - it seems there's a real kink in the curve at the SW end of the bridge (also a fairly tight S-curve just to the SW of that).  I could believe Degree of Curvature in the 12 - 15 degree range for the location of the derailment.  A quick look at the Multimodalways archive didn't find any track charts for this area under either B&O or CSX archives, but I could have missed it. 

- PDN. 

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Posted by 7j43k on Sunday, December 22, 2019 7:12 PM

Here is a handy degree-radius conversion chart:

 

 

Ed

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Posted by ChuckCobleigh on Sunday, December 22, 2019 6:55 PM

Lithonia Operator
Someone please enlighten me regarding terminology About track curvature.

There have been two functionally equivalent definitions, historically. One is the radius required to sweep 100 feet of curve in N degrees, the other is the radius required to sweep a 100-foot chord on a curve N degrees. For all intents and purposes, at least with respect to 1:1 scale railroading, they are the same measure. In general, you can use the formula D= 5730/R where R is in feet and D is in degrees with R>300 feet putting the difference between the "chord method" answer and the approximation less than 1/10 degree, less than 1/100 degree when R>800 feet.

DC or Mudchicken can illuminate how surveyors use this to stake or measure curves, and if you are really masochistic, you can ask about horizontal spirals into and out of curves (or why passenger cars don't jerk you out of your seat when going into a curve).

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Posted by 7j43k on Sunday, December 22, 2019 2:43 PM

diningcar

An old RR surveyers eyeball says this is a 2-3 degree curve.

 

 

I suggest you scale off of an overhead view, as I did:

 

Using Googlemaps satellite view, I zoomed in until I was on the 50 foot scale.  On the screen, the radius of the curve is approximately 5 inches.  The length of the 50 foot scale is 3/4 inch.

5 / .75 = 6.7 units

Since each unit represents 50 feet, the curve radius is:

6.7 x 50 = 335 feet

 

As I said, this is an approximate method, so carrying accuracy to 3 decimals is pushing it.  The radius is roughly 300 (one decimal place).  It is certainly not over 450 feet.  And certainly not under 250 feet.

But it is nowhere near 2-3 degrees, which is approximately a 2000-3000 foot radius.

If you care to go through my method yourself and point out my error, I would appreciate it.  Nobody likes to be wrong.

 

 

Ed

 

PS:  I have since scaled off of a USGS topo map, and also got approximately 300 feet.

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Posted by diningcar on Sunday, December 22, 2019 2:12 PM

An old RR surveyers eyeball says this is a 2-3 degree curve. Probably train handling is responsible for this one. 

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Posted by BaltACD on Sunday, December 22, 2019 2:07 PM

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by MMLDelete on Sunday, December 22, 2019 12:22 PM

Someone please enlighten me regarding terminology About track curvature.

This I how I understand it:

A 300' radius curve, if continued around 360 degrees to form a circle, that circle would have diameter of 600'. Which would be a very tight railroad curve. Correct?

A 5-degree curve, in the space of 100 ft, will change direction by 5 degrees. Correct?

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, December 22, 2019 11:40 AM

PJS1
What is a steerable truck?  How does it work?

If you look up 'radial truck' it's the same basic principle; Trains Magazine had a pretty good early explanation circa 1995 that I believe they provided free as a 'reprint' on the Web for many years and perhaps still do.  The principle is also extensively discussed in Lionel Wiener's book on articulated locomotives.

The basic principle is that the leading and trailing axles of the truck itself have the ability to pivot so they can be better aligned as tangent to the line of the rail even in a sharp curve, and are then 'steered' by a system of levers so that the leading axle is correctly aligned relative to the truck frame.  

Note that in the case if the later EMD HTCR-II trucks that the actual center less pivoting of the trucks relative to the frame can be actively controlled with elastomer-sandwich shear springs, which also give good lateral compliance.

The GE equivalent has those heavy outside levers that look like hinged boards.  There is a patent that shows and describes how these are supposed to work.  CSX has a fairly great number of engines with these, so they must be effective enough to preserve.

One practical effect of the 'usual' steering on a C truck is that the effective rigid wheelbase of the truck goes to zero.  You can still hear a little flange squeal on short instances of excessive curvature but the usual kinds of curve noise are relatively absent.

There are designs for steerable-axle four-wheel trucks, although they do require somewhat more design complexity to work as intended.  In most North Anerican practice a little additional controlled lateral provides most of the 'benefit' that steered axles would at the speeds involved for B trucks.

I'm sorry Dr. Track (buslist) is no longer with us, as he could have provided much more detailed information, including true best practices for two-axle steering.

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Posted by PJS1 on Sunday, December 22, 2019 11:11 AM

BaltACD
 Six axle engines WITHOUT steerable trucks are PROHIBITED from operating anywhere on the Shenandoah Sub. 

What is a steerable truck?  How does it work?

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Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, December 21, 2019 11:45 PM

7j43k
Leaving out the possibility of a cold weather rail failure (see Balt ACD), we can consider the possibility of:

1) engineer can't handle his train--he knew what he had, but he screwed up

2) other opperators caused the failure--another locomotive in the train, as operated by another engineer, did not properly intereact with the engineer

3) engineer was not correctly informed of the train he was to operate

other contributors gratefully accepted 

Ed

The 30+ miles from Winchester to Harpers Ferry is a territory that does not require anything other than normal head end power - loaded or empty - this was a empty train.

The airiel view of the incident leads me to believe that the train had been stopped at the Absolute Signal at Sandy Hook (absolute signal at the East End of the bridge).  The way the cars are arranged makes it look like a 'string line' type derailment.  For this to happen, I suspect the engineer started pulling 'hard' before the brakes released on the rear of the train. Without having a ground level picture - it LOOKS like the rear truck on the trailing engine is also derailed to the 'inside' of the curve.

Despite the incident happening in the 2AM - 3AM area - vandalism of someone turning a anglecock somewhere back in the train is a possibility, though at that hour of the morning it is rather unlikely.

I am not able to see the numbers of the engines involved.  Six axle engines WITHOUT steerable trucks are PROHIBITED from operating anywhere on the Shenandoah Sub.

CSX rules require crews to have proper train documentation for their train prior to departing the origin of the train.  If the Engineer 'didn't know' what was in his train - he is in violation of the requirement of having proper train documentation.

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Posted by 7j43k on Saturday, December 21, 2019 10:45 PM

Leaving out the possibility of a cold weather rail failure (see Balt ACD), we can consider the possibility of:

1) engineer can't handle his train--he knew what he had, but he screwed up

2) other opperators caused the failure--another locomotive in the train, as operated by another engineer, did not properly intereact with the engineer

3) engineer was not correctly informed of the train he was to operate

other contributors gratefully accepted

 

Ed

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Posted by Gramp on Saturday, December 21, 2019 10:15 PM

Was the bridge that the engines are on then a replacement for the civil war destroyed bridge, which then was partially displaced by the double track bridge?

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Posted by Deggesty on Saturday, December 21, 2019 6:55 PM

That footbridge is quite popular; I have seen many people on it as I passed through Harpers Ferry by train.

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Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, December 21, 2019 5:32 PM

Miningman
The line seems to have been a lot straighter in the past as those remnant supports across the water suggest, and if it was the railroad.

https://www.nps.gov/articles/harpers-ferry-to-south-mountain.htm

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Posted by 7j43k on Saturday, December 21, 2019 5:31 PM

BaltACD

 

Concerning 'broken rail' - what part of GUESS didn't you comprehend.  A guess I made BEFORE I came across the top down view from Maryland Heights.

 

Is there more than one part?  

 

Ed

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Saturday, December 21, 2019 5:24 PM
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Posted by Miningman on Saturday, December 21, 2019 4:59 PM

The line seems to have been a lot straighter in the past as those remnant supports across the water suggest, and if it was the railroad. 

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Saturday, December 21, 2019 4:59 PM

It would be interesting if someone would give us the history of this bridge.  It appears that originally there was a bridge to the north that may have only had a very gentle curve.  A replacemnt bridge seems to have made this track a compound   S  curve ?

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Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, December 21, 2019 4:43 PM

7j43k
How do you know all the cars in the train are empty?  Was there a locomotive(s) further back in the train?  If the train was held, how could there be a derailment caused by a rail failure?  How do you know there was a rail failure?

For that matter, if a train of empties were long enough, it could still have enough friction to cause the stringlining.

I surely don't KNOW it was stringlining.  But it looks more like that than a track failure.  To me.

Ed

Concerning 'broken rail' - what part of GUESS didn't you comprehend.  A guess I made BEFORE I came across the top down view from Maryland Heights.

Loaded grain trains come from the BNSF at Chicago with BNSF power to Brunswick.  Upon arrival at Brunswick a crew with CSX power operates the train down to the customer at Winchester, VA.  When the customer empties the train, a crew is called to bring the EMPTIES back to Brunswick for further movement back to the BNSF - most likely with the power that brought the train to Brunswick.  The Shenandoah Sub west of Millville Quarry, doesn't like today's 6-axle locomotives.

Trains are normally on the order of 50 to 65 cars.  The customer at Winchester can't handle any more in a single train, they can't handle multiple trains at the same time either.

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Posted by 7j43k on Saturday, December 21, 2019 4:42 PM

mudchicken

7j43k

The curve radius is roughly 300 feet. 

 

LaughLaughLaugh  (Where'd you get that from? A 19+ degree main track curve?)

 

 

 

I scaled it from an overhead "satellite" view.  Perhaps I mismeasured.  What do you get?

I just did it again, from a different source, and got the same number.  Actually, it was 333 feet; but I felt that my measurement methods didn't deserve that kind of accuracy, so I rounded to 300 feet.

I DID say "roughly".

 

Ed

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Posted by mudchicken on Saturday, December 21, 2019 4:03 PM

7j43k

The video shows no failure of or damage to the track.  Yes, it could be small enough that it doesn't show.

The story says the cars were empty.

The curve radius is roughly 300 feet.

 

It looks like stringlining to me.  I would surely like to hear details about the rest of the train.

 

Ed

 

7j43k

The video shows no failure of or damage to the track.  Yes, it could be small enough that it doesn't show.

The story says the cars were empty.

The curve radius is roughly 300 feet.

 

It looks like stringlining to me.  I would surely like to hear details about the rest of the train.

 

Ed

 

7j43k

The video shows no failure of or damage to the track.  Yes, it could be small enough that it doesn't show.

The story says the cars were empty.

The curve radius is roughly 300 feet.

 

It looks like stringlining to me.  I would surely like to hear details about the rest of the train.

 

Ed

 

7j43k

The video shows no failure of or damage to the track.  Yes, it could be small enough that it doesn't show.

The story says the cars were empty.

The curve radius is roughly 300 feet.

 

It looks like stringlining to me.  I would surely like to hear details about the rest of the train.

 

Ed

 

7j43k

The curve radius is roughly 300 feet. 

LaughLaughLaugh  (Where'd you get that from? A 19+ degree main track curve?)

Mudchicken Nothing is worth taking the risk of losing a life over. Come home tonight in the same condition that you left home this morning in. Safety begins with ME.... cinscocom-west

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