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Poles

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Poles
Posted by Murphy Siding on Wednesday, May 18, 2022 8:25 AM

Along a BNSF line in flat Nebraska yesterday, I noticed rows of what looked like 8" to 12" round  creosote poles in line next to the tracks. They were spaced evenly  about 3 to 4 feet apart, in a nice row parallel to the tracks, about 15 to 20 away. This was in flat farmland country, so they're not holding back a landslide or anything. The posts all poke up about 2' through the ballast at trackside. What did I see?

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by dpeltier on Wednesday, May 18, 2022 8:40 AM

Murphy Siding

Along a BNSF line in flat Nebraska yesterday, I noticed rows of what looked like 8" to 12" round  creosote poles in line next to the tracks. They were spaced evenly  about 3 to 4 feet apart, in a nice row parallel to the tracks, about 15 to 20 away. This was in flat farmland country, so they're not holding back a landslide or anything. The posts all poke up about 2' through the ballast at trackside. What did I see?

 

I have seen those along the Sioux City Sub (Sioux City IA to Ashland NE via Fremont), which I assume is the line you're talking about?

If so - then they are in indeed timber piles installed to stop the embankment from sliding in what the geotech people call a "global stability failure". The land is flat, but the subgrade is terrible.

Dan

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Posted by diningcar on Wednesday, May 18, 2022 9:05 AM

MC, your thoughts please.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Wednesday, May 18, 2022 10:20 AM

dpeltier

 

 
Murphy Siding

Along a BNSF line in flat Nebraska yesterday, I noticed rows of what looked like 8" to 12" round  creosote poles in line next to the tracks. They were spaced evenly  about 3 to 4 feet apart, in a nice row parallel to the tracks, about 15 to 20 away. This was in flat farmland country, so they're not holding back a landslide or anything. The posts all poke up about 2' through the ballast at trackside. What did I see?

 

 

 

I have seen those along the Sioux City Sub (Sioux City IA to Ashland NE via Fremont), which I assume is the line you're talking about?

If so - then they are in indeed timber piles installed to stop the embankment from sliding in what the geotech people call a "global stability failure". The land is flat, but the subgrade is terrible.

Dan

 

You're right on! Sioux City to Fremont trip. The subgrade is terrible? Is that related to the entire state of Nebraska sitting on top of a sand pit?

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by mudchicken on Wednesday, May 18, 2022 6:58 PM

Czechs ?

Shell piling -usually a long discredited practice used to hold up shoulders an embankments  that are too steep and gap-graded with the material having too many fines and/or organics in it leading to slope failures. Possibly also has a lagging (dump plank) wall hidden just out of site. Hell on Jordan Spreaders, Shoulder Cleaners, Undercutters and ballast regulators. Since the advent of lime injection, geogrid and advanced soil mechanics, you don't see much of it anymore.

If you've ever watched the old Wabash west of St. Louis along I-70, you will see plenty of it along with locations out in the swamps. (especially in areas where you don't have the real-estate to flatten out [lessen] the side slopes)

Big indicator of your local soils historically being not worth crap. (and there is not much better soils for many miles in any direction to replace fills with.)

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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Posted by dpeltier on Wednesday, May 18, 2022 8:33 PM

Murphy Siding

You're right on! Sioux City to Fremont trip. The subgrade is terrible? Is that related to the entire state of Nebraska sitting on top of a sand pit?

No, I don't think so. If it's anything like South Sioux, it's a thick layer of fat clay right under the topsoil that loses most of it's strength when wet. I spent a very bad week dealing with that crap a few years ago. Being 2,000' from a slaughterhouse didn't make it better.

Somewhere I might still have a geotech report prepared in preparation for some new siding / siding extension projects on the line. I don't remember the details, whether it was exactly the same stuff as South Sioux, but I remember a lot of discussion about how to deal with the subgrade. In the end, like most such projects, they got canceled before engineering was completed.

Dan

 

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Thursday, May 19, 2022 8:05 AM

mudchicken

Czechs ?

Shell piling -usually a long discredited practice used to hold up shoulders an embankments  that are too steep and gap-graded with the material having too many fines and/or organics in it leading to slope failures. Possibly also has a lagging (dump plank) wall hidden just out of site. Hell on Jordan Spreaders, Shoulder Cleaners, Undercutters and ballast regulators. Since the advent of lime injection, geogrid and advanced soil mechanics, you don't see much of it anymore.

If you've ever watched the old Wabash west of St. Louis along I-70, you will see plenty of it along with locations out in the swamps. (especially in areas where you don't have the real-estate to flatten out [lessen] the side slopes)

Big indicator of your local soils historically being not worth crap. (and there is not much better soils for many miles in any direction to replace fills with.)

 

I suspected it was along that line, but being in flat terrain threw me. I'd seen them before on the BNSF/ Milwaukee Road PCE between Summit and Aberdeen SD. There, the road bed is sometimes 30-40 feet above the surrounding prairie and the embankments are like cliffs.

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Thursday, May 19, 2022 8:09 AM

dpeltier

 

 
Murphy Siding

You're right on! Sioux City to Fremont trip. The subgrade is terrible? Is that related to the entire state of Nebraska sitting on top of a sand pit?

 

 

No, I don't think so. If it's anything like South Sioux, it's a thick layer of fat clay right under the topsoil that loses most of it's strength when wet. I spent a very bad week dealing with that crap a few years ago. Being 2,000' from a slaughterhouse didn't make it better.

Somewhere I might still have a geotech report prepared in preparation for some new siding / siding extension projects on the line. I don't remember the details, whether it was exactly the same stuff as South Sioux, but I remember a lot of discussion about how to deal with the subgrade. In the end, like most such projects, they got canceled before engineering was completed.

Dan

 

 

Interesting. I figured since it was a couple sets of rolly hills west of the Missouri River that it might be in sandhills country already. Also saw a couple of sand pits along the road where it looked like all they had to do to extract it was dig into a hillside.

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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