Trains.com

Why Do Rails Buckel?

4787 views
81 replies
1 rating 2 rating 3 rating 4 rating 5 rating
  • Member since
    September 2011
  • 6,449 posts
Posted by MidlandMike on Friday, July 26, 2019 9:58 PM

Euclid
White paint on rails will get dusty and grimy. ...

Iron worn off the rail head will also streak the white paint with rust orange (iron oxide) and yellow (iron hydroxide).

  • Member since
    January 2014
  • 8,221 posts
Posted by Euclid on Friday, July 26, 2019 8:24 PM

There are people advocating laws requiring urban roofs to have white shingles to stop climate change.  That too is dubious as to its effectiveness, I think.  So this painting things white to keep them cooler seems to be a bit of a fad. 

To use finishes to keep rails cool is doable, but it will take a very sophisticated approach.  The cost would be astronomical.  You can't just go out with a bunch of laborers and mop a bunch of white paint like whitewashing a fence. 

  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: US
  • 25,292 posts
Posted by BaltACD on Friday, July 26, 2019 8:07 PM

zugmann

BaltACD
When it is the only thing you can afford in a TIMELY fashion it is the only play you can make. Doubt it's effectiveness, but if it saves one derailment it will have more than paid for itself. 

I'm thinking that someone on this side of the pond tried that a few years ago.

I believe you are right and I believe there was no definitive evidence that it worked.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

  • Member since
    January 2002
  • From: Canterlot
  • 9,575 posts
Posted by zugmann on Friday, July 26, 2019 8:01 PM

BaltACD
When it is the only thing you can afford in a TIMELY fashion it is the only play you can make. Doubt it's effectiveness, but if it saves one derailment it will have more than paid for itself.

I'm thinking that someone on this side of the pond tried that a few years ago.

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any

  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: US
  • 25,292 posts
Posted by BaltACD on Friday, July 26, 2019 7:55 PM

Convicted One
I just read in my local newspaper that due to the record breaking heat wave  currently passing through Europe, many communities in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria are painting the rails white on vital rail links, hoping the extra reflectivity will reduce the amount of heat the rails absorb, to avoid damage to the rails.

I understand the reflectivity of white concept, but is this significant enough to actually protect the rails from kinking?

When it is the only thing you can afford in a TIMELY fashion it is the only play you can make.  Doubt it's effectiveness, but if it saves one derailment it will have more than paid for itself.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

  • Member since
    January 2014
  • 8,221 posts
Posted by Euclid on Friday, July 26, 2019 7:22 PM

Convicted One

I just read in my local newspaper that due to the record breaking heat wave  currently passing through Europe, many communities in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria are painting the rails white on vital rail links, hoping the extra reflectivity will reduce the amount of heat the rails absorb, to avoid damage to the rails.

I understand the reflectivity of white concept, but is this significant enough to actually protect the rails from kinking?

 

I don't know how effective it would be.  Light colors reflect and dark colors absorb.  Likewise, smooth surfaces reflect and rough surfaces absorb.  My understanding is that it has been discovered that the surface texture plays a bigger role in reflectivity/absorption than does light/dark colors.  The availablity of highest gloss paint seems to have diminished for some reason.  White paint on rails will get dusty and grimy.  So the paint would have to be routinely washed.  A paint that would stand up to this type of outdoor service in the sun and withstand routine washing would have to be a very high performance industrial product.  It would add a lot of cost. 

In any case, it would be interesting to see the technical details of how it is working. 

One other thought:  Ties and ballast will also absorb thermal radiation from the sun.  They, in turn, will heat the rails by direct contact through the heat transfer means of conduction.  Hot ties and ballast will also heat air by conduction, and it will rise up around the rails and heat them by the heat transfer means of convection.  And any heat transfered to the rails by conduction or convection will not be mitigated at all by painting them white. 

  • Member since
    April 2007
  • 4,557 posts
Posted by Convicted One on Friday, July 26, 2019 6:52 PM

I just read in my local newspaper that due to the record breaking heat wave  currently passing through Europe, many communities in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria are painting the rails white on vital rail links, hoping the extra reflectivity will reduce the amount of heat the rails absorb, to avoid damage to the rails.

I understand the reflectivity of white concept, but is this significant enough to actually protect the rails from kinking?

  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: US
  • 25,292 posts
Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, July 25, 2019 8:35 AM

CSSHEGEWISCH
Proper use is the key.  It seems that a lot of homeowners use enough herbicide to turn their lawns into a hazmat site as bad as some industrial sites near my old neighborhood.

Based upon the basic human thought process - 'If a little is good, more is better.'

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

  • Member since
    March 2016
  • From: Burbank IL (near Clearing)
  • 13,540 posts
Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Thursday, July 25, 2019 7:17 AM

Proper use is the key.  It seems that a lot of homeowners use enough herbicide to turn their lawns into a hazmat site as bad as some industrial sites near my old neighborhood.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
  • Member since
    April 2002
  • From: Northern Florida
  • 1,429 posts
Posted by SALfan on Wednesday, July 24, 2019 10:56 PM

Flintlock76

Organophosphorus compounds.  The first things I think of when I see the term are "Tabun," "Sarin," and "Soman."  Scary stuff indeed! 

Although I do know they had their origins in insecticide research.

Anyone remember chlordane?  Dad used it around the house to kill bugs and swore by the stuff.  Dad ALWAYS followed the directions for its use and never had a problem with it.  Too bad a lot of people didn't, it was a good product. 

 

I remember chlordane! It was indeed good stuff.  My father wouldn't let us kids anywhere near it.  I also remember a mixture of 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T with a little dishwashing liquid; pretty close to the dreaded Agent Orange, but would kill honeysuckle vines graveyard dead, and was about the only thing that would.  That and hungry goats, or VERY hungry cows.

  • Member since
    December 2001
  • From: Denver / La Junta
  • 10,820 posts
Posted by mudchicken on Wednesday, July 24, 2019 2:02 PM

That happy median/ rail neutral temperature is a balancing act that is a serious art (& science) form to get right by the M/W folks in the field that know the materials they have to work with.

While sun kinks and pull-aparts can happen anywhere, curves seem to create most of the problems - usually caused by surfacing operations that may have happened months or years before (nature of the beast with surfacing machinery, especially the track liners, plus rail anchors that are never enough and are wearing out in a holding/friction sense)...taking what Paul & Steve already very well tried to explain, when you see rail trying to lift up off the plates, getting snaky or showing evidence of lateral movements... out comes the welders and the section gangs trying to reduce pressure by removing rail. With CWR, you do not have the visual evidence of the rail gap closing up and a trail of broken bolts, but you sure can see that the compressive forces are at work in the track system.

Before all the FRA rules and the science of track expansion was better explored, most roadmasters in the summer when dealing with rail getting snaky or out of the plates (surfacing gang or just track heating-up) used to keep a few cars of ballast around that were watered-down in the cars during hot spells for dumping up to the top of rail ("plugging") to cool the rail off and keep the sun off most of the rail.. Doesn't work anymore - with fewer ballast cars and allowance for ballast in the budget having been curtailed (no excess allowed, no wide ballast shoulders - even in the curves))

(If that pull apart in winter happens in signal territory, you have some protection. Much less in dark territory. Some folks gamble and place the emphasis on protecting against sun kinks to the detriment of protection against pull-aparts. Signal system is no help in the heat and the heat plays hell with proper adjustment of switches around the points and stock rails.)

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
  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: US
  • 25,292 posts
Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, July 24, 2019 1:41 PM

The table I posted in the 3rd post on the first page of this thread is what one Class 1 uses as its 'formula' for rail expansion in differing temperature.  It state the nominal 'normal' temperatures for rail being laid.  The temperatures shown at the top of the table are not ambient temperatures but the change in temperatures.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

  • Member since
    January 2002
  • From: west coast
  • 141 posts
Posted by steve14 on Wednesday, July 24, 2019 12:38 PM

The forces involved with temperature change in rail get big. For those who like math the equation is this.

Change in Force = Cross sectional area of the rail x 200 x Change in temperature

136# rail has a cross section of 13.35 sq in, the 200 is a thermal force constant to make the answer end up in pounds of force and temperature is in degrees F. A 1 degree rise in rail temperature increases the force in the rail by about 2670 pounds. 

The temperature here is rail not air temperature. Rail temps can get up to 130-140 degrees on a hot day, but generally will not go above that no matter what the air temp is. It is the temperature differential (lowest low to highest high) over a year that determines what the desired neutral temperature (DNT) for laying rail is. Each road sets this themselves. It can be 85 degrees for North Dakota or 105 for Arizona. 

What resists this change in force are the ties, fastenings and ballast that make up the rest of the "system" of the track structure. The bottom of the tie/ballast interface provides about 50% of the resistance and the sides and shoulders split up the rest. 

Properly laid and maintained CWR track will have a well graded, sharply angular, clean, heavy, well compacted ballast with at least 1' wide shoulders and a minimum of about 12" of rock under the tie. The subgrade will be well compacted and well drained. The ties and fastenings (spikes or elastic fasteners, plates, anchors, etc) will be in good condition and properly applied. 

The "well compacted" part is critical. Doing work on the track at the extremes of temperature ranges can mess this up and lead to slow orders until the track structure is tightened up again. 

The system has to work together properly and has to be inspected properly to ensure any potential defficiencies are caught before they can create a problem. Get to know and love your local track inspector. 

  • Member since
    January 2019
  • 1,686 posts
Posted by Erik_Mag on Sunday, July 21, 2019 12:24 PM

You are correct in stating that steel will compress, the opposite occurs when the track drops below the neutral temperature and the cross section thins as the rails go into tension. The problem with compression in a long thin structure is that it is not stable with respect to buckling, the solution for another "long thin structure", radio towers, is the use of guy wires. A similar approachcould be taken with track, where the track is connected to anchors (which would have to be massive) on each side by steel cables,  but I doubt if would provide much of a benefit. When rails are under tension, the tensile forces tend to restore any deviations from straight - think "pushing" with a rope versus pulling.

The early descriptions of CWR mentioned that the rail should be laid on one of the hotter days of the year (i.e. high neutral temperature) to have it stay under tension for the vast majority of the year. The problem is that in areas of extreme summer/winter temperature shifts, the rails will pull apart at a weak point, so a compromise needs to be made between sun kinks and pull aparts.

  • Member since
    January 2014
  • 8,221 posts
Posted by Euclid on Sunday, July 21, 2019 11:31 AM

charlie hebdo
What methods are most commonly use to prevent or mitigate? It would seem to be becoming a more likely occurrence.

 

It is a common misbelief that the force of expansion is irresistible, and thus cannot be stopped.   Yet steel rail is elastic.  It can be stretched like a rubber band and then when the stretch force is relaxed, the rail will return back to its original length. 

Likewise, rail can be compressed lengthwise so it becomes shorter, and when the compression is released, the rail will rebound to its original length. 

It is this lengthwise compression that leads to sun kinks.  Although rail can be compressed, it does push back against that compression just like compressing a coil spring.  The pushback tends to buckle the rail into sideways loops that take up the extra length of expansion.  But if you can physically contain the rail side-to-side against that buckling pressure, the rail will compress to absorb the extra length of expansion without being able to buckle.  That side-to-side constraint is the role of ties and ballast.

But if even though the rail can be prevented from getting longer or moving side to side, thermal expansion will exert forces lengthwise and sideways as a reaction to the lengthwise force being restrained. And if those sideways forces on the rail find a weak spot in the rest of the track system, they will form sun kink as a reaction. 

However, if thermal expansion were indeed an irresistible force, we would see sun kinks and pull-aparts of welded rail every time the temperature changed. 

  • Member since
    September 2003
  • 21,669 posts
Posted by Overmod on Sunday, July 21, 2019 11:06 AM

diningcar
With the application of closely spaced rail anchors doesn't this force the expansion, vertically by small increments, within the spacing between two anchors and thus mitigate the linear expansion?

You still have the issue that the overall longitudinal force developed atomically by the thermal 'epansion' is developed, and while an increased number of anticreepers will 'subdivide' the force expressed by the corresponding subdivisions of rail length between anchors, the aggregate force will still be expressing on whatever the rail anchors bear against.  Any weak point in the longitudinal resistance, particularly one that progressively weakens if perturbed, then becomes a place where 'something's gotta give'. 

I suspect you will find that rapid release of even relatively short lengths of the expansion sends a shockwave along the rail that may help induce any other area(s) near the point of excursion into motion.

As noted, the provision of slab track along with good longitudinal 'anchoring' provides as good an immunity against lateral buckling as anything cost-effective.  As noted, though, this introduces preferred vertical buckling as a failure mode, perhaps preferentially under or immediately after passage of a train.  In my very humble opinion the chief issue here is not overt failure of the slab track, but a progressive working of the slab out of line and surface over time that would be very expensive to correct (unless you have explicit means for top-down rail adjusting while maintaining rigid longitudinal location integrity).

The correct approach to this remains periodic adjustment of rail length at the determined adjustment points between sections.  I believe there have been articles in Trains that cover progressive improvements in theory and practice over the years as field-welded extreme LWR with modern rail metallurgies have been implemented.

  • Member since
    September 2017
  • 5,636 posts
Posted by charlie hebdo on Sunday, July 21, 2019 10:34 AM

Paul_D_North_Jr

The principle reason rail buckles laterally instead of vertically is that the stiffness ("Moment of Inertia") of the rail in the sideways direction is much less than in the vertical direction - something like 1/3 or 1/4, IIRC (can't find the exact values for any rail section for around both the X-X and Y-Y axis). 

Even assembling 2 rails into a track - kind of like a ladder - doesn't make it all that much stronger in the lateral direction, as the rails are still free to slide over the ties, at least with spikes.  Rail anchors or spring clips do add some more resistance.  Otherwise, as to which way it'll go in theory is a contest between the weight of track (only) plus some vertical ballast resistance and the stiffer rail vs. the lateral resistance of the ties in ballast plus the effect or rail anchors and the weaker rail.  As a practical matter all the kinks I've ever seen are horizontal.  On the other hnd, concrete highways usually buckle vertically (happened on Delaware Rt. 1 near Frederica this past Friday). 

One reason that most observed buckling is lateral is the other factor that Overmod alluded to:  If the track did try to rise vertically, as soon as it got up a little bit it would lose contact with the ballast beneath, and hence lose that source of lateral frictional and interlocking resistance.  It would then be a lot easier to kink sideways, and then after that come back down.  It would be interesting to see or read about a closely instrumented event of that kind to see what the exact motions and time/ speed of them are.  That may have been done out at the TTCI or by some railroad's Test Dept., but I don't know of (or can't recall) it.  I don't think it's a sudden sharp snap - though that could happen under a moving train - more like a couple seconds.  Unlike a theoretical Euler column with a constant load, almost as soon as the track starts moving the compression is released and the force decreases, bringing it back into a new state of equilibrium at the deflected location pretty quickly.  

- PDN. 

 

What methods are most commonly use to prevent or mitigate?  It would seem to be becoming a more likely occurrence. 

  • Member since
    December 2006
  • 1,754 posts
Posted by diningcar on Sunday, July 21, 2019 10:30 AM

With the application of closely spaced rail anchors doesn't this force the expansion, vertically by small increments, within the spacing between two anchors and thus mitigate the linear expansion?

  • Member since
    October 2006
  • From: Allentown, PA
  • 9,810 posts
Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Sunday, July 21, 2019 10:15 AM

The principle reason rail buckles laterally instead of vertically is that the stiffness ("Moment of Inertia") of the rail in the sideways direction is much less than in the vertical direction - something like 1/3 or 1/4, IIRC (can't find the exact values for any rail section for around both the X-X and Y-Y axis). 

Even assembling 2 rails into a track - kind of like a ladder - doesn't make it all that much stronger in the lateral direction, as the rails are still free to slide over the ties, at least with spikes.  Rail anchors or spring clips do add some more resistance.  Otherwise, as to which way it'll go in theory is a contest between the weight of track (only) plus some vertical ballast resistance and the stiffer rail vs. the lateral resistance of the ties in ballast plus the effect of rail anchors and the weaker rail.  As a practical matter all the kinks I've ever seen are horizontal.  On the other hand, concrete highways usually buckle vertically (happened on Delaware Rt. 1 near Frederica this past Friday). 

One reason that most observed buckling is lateral is the other factor that Overmod alluded to:  If the track did try to rise vertically, as soon as it got up a little bit it would lose contact with the ballast beneath, and hence lose that source of lateral frictional and interlocking resistance.  It would then be a lot easier to kink sideways, and then after that come back down.  It would be interesting to see or read about a closely instrumented event of that kind to see what the exact motions and time/ speed of them are.  That may have been done out at the TTCI or by some railroad's Test Dept., but I don't know of (or can't recall) it.  I don't think it's a sudden sharp snap - though that could happen under a moving train - more like a couple seconds.  Unlike a theoretical Euler column with a constant load, almost as soon as the track starts moving the compression is released and the force decreases, bringing it back into a new state of equilibrium at the deflected location pretty quickly.  

- PDN. 

"This Fascinating Railroad Business" (title of 1943 book by Robert Selph Henry of the AAR)
  • Member since
    December 2001
  • From: Northern New York
  • 25,021 posts
Posted by tree68 on Saturday, July 20, 2019 9:17 PM

Flintlock76
The worst is when I read a joke and get it right away when I'm drinking a Coke!  Ever shoot Coca-Cola through your nose?  Agony, man, agony!

Vernor's isn't much better.  The worst part of getting a joke "later" is that the time is well past for any sort of witty reply...

LarryWhistling
Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) 
Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you
My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date
Come ride the rails with me!
There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...

  • Member since
    January 2019
  • From: Henrico, VA
  • 9,728 posts
Posted by Flintlock76 on Saturday, July 20, 2019 5:46 PM

zardoz

 

 
Flintlock76
Selector had his tongue firmly planted in his cheek, just as I did when I mentioned "Diazinon Alley."

 

I'm soEmbarrassed, and feel like such aDunce.

 

 

Don't feel bad, there's jokes I don't get either from time to time, or don't get until an hour later. 

The worst is when I read a joke and get it right away when I'm drinking a Coke!  Ever shoot Coca-Cola through your nose?  Agony, man, agony!

  • Member since
    January 2003
  • From: Kenosha, WI
  • 6,567 posts
Posted by zardoz on Saturday, July 20, 2019 5:42 PM

Flintlock76
Selector had his tongue firmly planted in his cheek, just as I did when I mentioned "Diazinon Alley."

I'm so Embarrassed, and feel like such a Dunce.

Overmod, thanks for the detailed explanation.Thumbs Up

  • Member since
    December 2001
  • From: Northern New York
  • 25,021 posts
Posted by tree68 on Saturday, July 20, 2019 4:06 PM

Semper Vaporo
The track would 'tent' about 6 and a half feet from the ground in the middle.

Never took trig....

The corollary to that finding is therefore that the track would likely displace a similar distance horizontally.

LarryWhistling
Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) 
Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you
My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date
Come ride the rails with me!
There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...

  • Member since
    April 2007
  • From: Iowa
  • 3,293 posts
Posted by Semper Vaporo on Saturday, July 20, 2019 3:47 PM

Semper Vaporo

{Snip}

Assume you have 1000 feet of rail that is perfectly fastened down at each end such that the ends cannot move.  Further assume the rail is perfectly constrained on the sides such that it cannot move sideways.

Then assume the rail has been cut exactly in half and a hinge installed between the two halves.

If the rail expands, the only thing that can happen is for it to compress or hinge in the middle and raise up off the ground ("Tenting").

Assumming the rail halves do not bend in the vertical direction (sag) but each half remains perfectly straight, how high will the center raise up from the ground if the rail expands by 1 inch?

 

I guess nobody knows how (or maybe nobody cares).  Since I have an experience with track doing what I just described in the story problem, I'll relate it first and then GIVE you the answer.

I have an Aster Mikado Live Steam 1:32 scale steam locomotive and the only track I could afford after purchasing the kit to build the loco, was cheap 2nd hand plastic track (like that comes with the toy trains you find at Christmas time to have a battery operated train go around the Christmas tree).  I had enough straight sections to lay on four 10-ft long 1x8 boards on the ground, end to end.  The plastic track was 2nd hand and had been outside a few years and the molded in clips on the ends that held the sections together were quite brittle.  Thus I was concerned that a wind storm might blow the track around and break it at the joints.  So I nailed down the end pieces with just one nail each.  I ran my train many times using a Radio Control for the Throttle and Reverser lever.  Worked great and was lots of fun going as fast as I could for most of the 40-ft of track yet bring it to a stop before it ran out of track.

I put the track down in about mid Spring and it served me well for a couple of months... then one day, I came home from work and that day had been a scorcher.  As I drove up the driveway I could see my track off to the side and noted that it was in the shape of a bell curve, the center being about THREE FEET above the boards.

Like a fool, I went over and BARELY touched the middle of that humungus arch and it fell over, breaking nearly every molded-in joint.

 

Now, the story problem:  1000-ft. of track cut in half in the middle, the whole track expands by 1 inch, how far does the middle raise from the ground?

Old man Pathagorius comes into play here... (remember him?)

A^2 + B^2 = C^2

We know that A = 500 (1/2 of the 1000 ft.)

and C is the hypotenuese of what will be a right triangle when the rail expands and lifts in the middle, so it will be 500ft + 0.5 inches.

Solving for B gives us, sqrt (C^2 - A^2) = B

Convert it all to inches:

A=500*12 = 6000 inches.

C=500*12) + 0.5 = 6000.5 inches.

Squaring both gives:

A=36,000,000

C=36,006,000.25 

Solving for B^2 thus becomes 36,006,000.25 - 36,000,000 = 6,000.25

And the square root of 6,000.25 = 77.46 inches.

The track would 'tent' about 6 and a half feet from the ground in the middle.

This is assumming that the rail does not sag on the ends to form more of a bell curve instead of a straight sided triangle.  If it sagged, then the height would be much more since the sag along the length would effectively shorten the space where the rail would lift, but the total expansion would remain the same.

Semper Vaporo

Pkgs.

  • Member since
    January 2019
  • From: Henrico, VA
  • 9,728 posts
Posted by Flintlock76 on Saturday, July 20, 2019 2:29 PM

Some things NEVER change bro, hence the veracity of the old saying...

"My mind's made up, don't confuse me with the facts!"

And some of us hear the story of "The Emperor's New Clothes" and get the moral right away.  Some never do.

  • Member since
    September 2003
  • 21,669 posts
Posted by Overmod on Saturday, July 20, 2019 2:16 PM

Flintlock76
Phlogiston was an old alchemist's theory, no more real than the "Philosopher's Stone" that was supposed to turn lead into gold.

It was considerably more than that; in fact, it was an early demonstration of how organized bullying can distort good scientific practice to the point of destroying careers in the service of promoting a dubious theory.  Kind of like a free-world version of the business with Lysenko, or the current anthropogenic-climate-change scam (as opposed to legitimate theories or concerns with AGW, which I repeat I support).

Very dangerous precedent for actual science, and while ridiculed now, there was a time not too distant where 'phlogiston deniers' had a hard time of it.

  • Member since
    September 2003
  • 21,669 posts
Posted by Overmod on Saturday, July 20, 2019 2:06 PM

zardoz
Compression, not expansion?

Yes.  The expansion is a thermodynamic effect, caused by the increased atomic vibration from the heating.  This causes the component atoms in the alloy to move on average slightly farther apart, making the outside dimensions 'grow' proportionally.  That in and of itself will not and cannot make a rail bend.

Meanwhile, the physical dimensions measured from 'end to end' of the heated rail section can be treated as fixed -- if, in fact, not actually pressed against by expansion in the neighboring parts of rail, so the longitudinal component of the thermal expansion is resisted.  (This is the reason for the observation that the cross-section preferentially 'grows' in this situation; the width and to an only slightly lesser extent the height can expand unrestrained, so the proportions change in the stressed case... but not by enough to matter much; the very long resultant of longitudinal stress can still express itself as considerable force without causing extensive lateral distortion (let alone plastic change past the yield point) in the rail section.  It is the longitudinal constraint, which can be thought of as causing 'compression' in the heated rail section, that produces the force that expresses as bending.

Gravity may not be 'all that' strong but it is very consistently acting.  Since there is comparatively little if any lateral restoring force in the track structure once the usual causes providing that have been deranged in some way, even if the track might tend to lift at a given point enough to weaken the lateral resistance, it is much more likely that all the expansion will go into the lateral -- into progressively buckling the rails into lateral curves -- rather than hold the rails elevated against constant restoring force.  There is certainly enough aggregate weight to transfer most vertical deflection, should it develop, into additional lateral excursion relieving the gravitational potential energy increase from elevation.  The timescale here, from whatever physical events produced the buckle or 'kink' to its being observed by a human being, is so dramatically long that we can expect any transient effects to have 'relaxed' to equilibrium long before a human observes it; I believe most cases of observed sun-kink propagation have been, as expected, lateral. 

We might also add that many examples, including the one Balt illustrated, show a further effect: once some part of the track starts to move, shock propagates through the track and allows effects like sinusoidal modes to appear in the lateral deflection.  Hence you can get, instead of one big bump like the Australian example on YouTube, these complicated multiple esses by the time everything comes to rest at the elevated temperature.  (Would that it would be less nondeterministic and 'go back where it started' when things cool down!)

  • Member since
    January 2019
  • From: Henrico, VA
  • 9,728 posts
Posted by Flintlock76 on Saturday, July 20, 2019 12:21 PM

zardoz

 

 
selector
The truth is that all matter has something called 'phlogiston' in it. 

 

I understood that this hypothetical element's existence was mostly disproved by sometime in the 18th century.

 

 

It was.

Phlogiston was an old alchemist's theory, no more real than the "Philosopher's Stone" that was supposed to turn lead into gold.

Selector had his tongue firmly planted in his cheek, just as I did when I mentioned "Diazinon Alley."

  • Member since
    January 2003
  • From: Kenosha, WI
  • 6,567 posts
Posted by zardoz on Saturday, July 20, 2019 12:14 PM

selector
The truth is that all matter has something called 'phlogiston' in it. 

I understood that this hypothetical element's existence was mostly disproved by sometime in the 18th century.

  • Member since
    January 2003
  • From: Kenosha, WI
  • 6,567 posts
Posted by zardoz on Saturday, July 20, 2019 12:06 PM

Overmod
The usual buckling occurs when the rail is in compression and there is a spot failure of lateral support of some of the ties.  The compression relieves preferentially as the rails and ties physically shift to one side, usually not humping up because the structure is strongly 'constrained' by gravity in the vertical direction.

Compression, not expansion?

And are you sure it is gravity holding the track down? The amount of pull from gravity over such a short distance on such a small mass would seems to be practically irrelevant.

Join our Community!

Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.

Search the Community

Newsletter Sign-Up

By signing up you may also receive occasional reader surveys and special offers from Trains magazine.Please view our privacy policy