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Milwaukee Road vs. Rock Island grading and engineering

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Milwaukee Road vs. Rock Island grading and engineering
Posted by Murphy Siding on Tuesday, November 8, 2022 10:10 PM

A bike path near my house is on top of an old Rock Island rail bed. The parallel former Milwaukee Road line 100 feet away is graded much better. For example, in a half mile stretch the Rock Island ROW rises and then drops 12 feet. The Milwaukee Road ROW- now the BNSF line through town- is flat as a pancake. I've seen other ROW from both in the area. In general, was the Milwaukee Road usually built to higher standards than the Rock Island in the same area?

 

I find this a little bit troubling, as I'd always heard that the Rock Island line was a mighty good road.

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Posted by CMStPnP on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 1:47 AM

Murphy Siding
A bike path near my house is on top of an old Rock Island rail bed. The parallel former Milwaukee Road line 100 feet away is graded much better. For example, in a half mile stretch the Rock Island ROW rises and then drops 12 feet. The Milwaukee Road ROW- now the BNSF line through town- is flat as a pancake. I've seen other ROW from both in the area. In general, was the Milwaukee Road usually built to higher standards than the Rock Island in the same area?

Did you look at the line history of each to make sure they were constructed by each instead of merged in railroads?    Just curious.

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Posted by timz on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 9:01 AM

Murphy Siding
In general, was the Milwaukee Road ...

No one knows any general rule.

Maybe if you tell people what lines you're talking about someone will know when they were built. Rock Island redid its lines at several places.

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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 9:45 AM

timz
 
Murphy Siding
In general, was the Milwaukee Road ... 

No one knows any general rule. 

Maybe if you tell people what lines you're talking about someone will know when they were built. Rock Island redid its lines at several places.

Most rail companies in the 19th century were created as undercapitalized entities and built as much mileage as they could and moved as little earth as possible to build that mileage.  As more capital became available, sometimes it was reinvested into the physical plant to minimize changes in line elevation and increase the radius of curves.

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Posted by diningcar on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 10:18 AM

The original location of tracks was dictated by more than capital funds. The need of water for locomotives, the lack of tools to excavate deep rock cuts, the flood plains of certain rivers or streams, plus the politics of states or towns and large land holdings. 

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 10:55 AM

diningcar
... the lack of tools to excavate deep rock cuts, ...

Rock cuts on the Mohawk and Malone (NYC Adirondack Division, now Adirondack Railroad) are usually just wide enough.  Accounts of early operations indicate that occasionally fittings would be knocked off steam locomotives, and even today we worry occasionally about whether cars like the dome will clear.

A common practice was (and still is) to use the dirt from a cut to fill in a dip.  As noted, sometimes the economics would not allow for "outside" fill to be brought in.

One extremely large fill on the MA&N probably still has a trestle under it.  The chief reason for building the trestle was to reach a spot on the other side from which fill could be obtained.

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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 11:32 AM

diningcar
The original location of tracks was dictated by more than capital funds. The need of water for locomotives, the lack of tools to excavate deep rock cuts, the flood plains of certain rivers or streams, plus the politics of states or towns and large land holdings. 

Capital available dictated each and every aspect you mentioned.  Everything needs the lubrication provided by money (or the lack thereof).  If there was enough money to 'do the job right', it was; if there wasn't the job got done in the lease expensive way possible.  It has always taken money to lubricate politicians - some have gotten very rich standing in the way of progress until they were sufficiently lubricated.

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Posted by Euclid on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 12:29 PM
In the earliest days, cuts were made by horses pulling a hand scoop.  When the scoop was full, the horses would slide it to carry the load to the dump location, usually quite near to the cut location. 
 
Around 1880-1890, the steam shovel was introduced and this made cut excavating much more efficient.  Cuts could be made deeper than before.  Deeper/longer cuts would generate more fill, and this called for a means of soil transportation to get the soil to more distant fill location.  The new transportation that accompanied the steam shovel was the “Dinky” (0-4-0T) or similar small locomotive, often operating on narrow gage track with very light rails such as 25-40 pound. 
 
The track was extended over the fill area by building a trestle.  The soil was carried in side dump cars which were convenient to unload by just by dumping over the side of the trestle.
 
The trestle was just temporary, and thus of low quality, and was buried in place as the filling commenced.  Sometimes line improvements called for filling trestles that had been in actual train use for some years.  These too were often buried in place.
 
So, the dinky, side dump cars, steam shovel, and trestle were all part of a new steam powered excavating system that would cut, transport cut material, and fill across low areas.  
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Posted by jeffhergert on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 2:55 PM

The Sioux Falls line of the RI was built by the Burlington, Cedar Rapids & Northern Ry. That railroad became part of the RI in 1903, although they had control of it about 10 or 15 years earlier. 

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Posted by SD60MAC9500 on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 2:57 PM

I imagine BNSF has improved its former MILW lines. I'm assuming the BNSF line you're mentioning is probably the Mitchell Sub. All CRI&P routes into South Dakota were branches hence the elevation change you're seeing. Branches are built much more cheaply for the most part than mainlines.

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Posted by dpeltier on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 11:05 PM

SD60MAC9500

I imagine BNSF has improved its former MILW lines. I'm assuming the BNSF line you're mentioning is probably the Mitchell Sub. All CRI&P routes into South Dakota were branches hence the elevation change you're seeing. Branches are built much more cheaply for the most part than mainlines.

 

BNSF has certainly improved the track in terms of rail, ties, ballast, and bridges, especially after buying the Core Lines outright from the state about 15 years ago. But I don't think they altered the profile or alignment in any significant way.

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Posted by Erik_Mag on Wednesday, November 9, 2022 11:35 PM

tree68

One extremely large fill on the MA&N probably still has a trestle under it.  The chief reason for building the trestle was to reach a spot on the other side from which fill could be obtained.

A perhaps even more important reason was that it was easier to create the fill by dumping carloads of dirt from the trestle, than doing it lift by lift with material carted in. One strong incentive to cover a trestle with fill was to elminate the possiblity of the trestle burning down.

FWIW, the Central Pacific had a number of trestles that were filled in after the transcontinental line was finished.

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Posted by tree68 on Thursday, November 10, 2022 6:36 AM

Erik_Mag
 
tree68

One extremely large fill on the MA&N probably still has a trestle under it.  The chief reason for building the trestle was to reach a spot on the other side from which fill could be obtained.

 

 

A perhaps even more important reason was that it was easier to create the fill by dumping carloads of dirt from the trestle, than doing it lift by lift with material carted in. One strong incentive to cover a trestle with fill was to elminate the possiblity of the trestle burning down.

FWIW, the Central Pacific had a number of trestles that were filled in after the transcontinental line was finished.

Reportedly they took the top off a hill to get the material needed...

One story regarding the trestle was that the state bridge inspector noted that it didn't look all that healthy, to which the reply was that it was going to get covered anyhow.

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Posted by Convicted One on Thursday, November 10, 2022 6:58 AM

Okay, I'll bite.  Why is it that anytime I propose using old railroad ties for landscaping forms, I'm reminded that without proper drainage, they'll rot. Yet here we have load bearing wooden trestles being buried intentionally? What am I missing? Sigh

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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, November 10, 2022 7:10 AM

Convicted One

Okay, I'll bite.  Why is it that anytime I propose using old railroad ties for landscaping forms, I'm reminded that without proper drainage, they'll rot. Yet here we have load bearing wooden trestles being buried intentionally? What am I missing? Sigh

The fill trestle has no purpose once it has been filled, so it is okay if it rots.  If the fill is in a previously unfilled area, the trestle is contructed  with low quality because it is only needed for the filling work.

However, the rotting will cause fill subsidence over time, which will require subsequent work in the future to raise the track by adding a little more fill.  

 
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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, November 10, 2022 7:15 AM

Erik_Mag

 

 
tree68

One extremely large fill on the MA&N probably still has a trestle under it.  The chief reason for building the trestle was to reach a spot on the other side from which fill could be obtained.

 

 

A perhaps even more important reason was that it was easier to create the fill by dumping carloads of dirt from the trestle, than doing it lift by lift with material carted in. One strong incentive to cover a trestle with fill was to elminate the possiblity of the trestle burning down.

FWIW, the Central Pacific had a number of trestles that were filled in after the transcontinental line was finished.

 

That was the reason for filling the trestle.  If filled without a trestle, dump cars would have to be dumped one by one at the starting edge of the fill, and then horse/ scraper scooped up, skidded out into the fill area, and dumped one scoopful at a time.
 
For a new line, the trestle had to be built from scratch with considerable labor and materials, even though the materials and construction were of low quality because they had no purpose after the fill was made.  Essentially the temporary trestle was like a template for placing the dirt fill without any need for spreading it and grading it in lifts.  As the trestle was filled, the fill soil was often water jetted to consolidate it as a form of compaction.  
 
Also if the fill was dumped at the edge of the fill zone the dump cars would typically arrive in a short train, so the dumping would need to extend the train-length back from the edge of the fill zone. 
 
In other cases, there were projects just to improve existing mainlines, which often included filling existing trestles that were built as permanent structures when the track of first laid.  For this work, standard gage flat cars were often used to transport the fill soil because the track was in place as standard gage.  The flat cars were bridged between them with an iron sheet to make a continuous surface to hold the fill being carried.  Then to dump, a Lidgerwood unloader would be used to cable drag a big “V”-plow down the length of the train and cast the soil off of each side of the flatcars.   The Lidgerwood had a steam powered drum winch permanently mounted on a railcar, and taking piped steam from the locomotive handling the dump train to power the winch.
 
Here is a Lidgerwood Unloader illustration.  In this case the unloader plow is biased to cast fill material off just one side of the fill train.  Note that these cars flatcars have low sides to better contain the fill soil.  The plow apparently lifts the soil up and over the lows car sides.  Also, the low sides guide the plow so it can't accidentally run off of the side while being winched ahead.  You can see the Lidgerwood winch car next to the locomotive:
 
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Posted by Convicted One on Thursday, November 10, 2022 8:32 AM

Euclid
the rotting will cause fill subsidence over time,

That was my first thought. I guess my surprise is with the expectation that subsequent remedial action will be "little".  I mean if you are talking about a 25' fill, you are gonna have trestle members rotting 25' beneath the surface,

And, I'd think that the framing members would really interfere with compaction.  Isn't "compaction" the alpha and omega of site prep?

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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, November 10, 2022 9:21 AM

Convicted One
 
Euclid
the rotting will cause fill subsidence over time, 

That was my first thought. I guess my surprise is with the expectation that subsequent remedial action will be "little".  I mean if you are talking about a 25' fill, you are gonna have trestle members rotting 25' beneath the surface,

And, I'd think that the framing members would really interfere with compaction.  Isn't "compaction" the alpha and omega of site prep?

I would imagine that operating trains continually over the trestle that has been made into a fill would aid in the compaction process as the trestle structure will be subject to vibratory forces with every train the moves across it.

My understanding is that oxygen is required in the decay/rotting process.  The deeper timbers get buried in the fill, the less oxygen is available to sustain the process. 

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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, November 10, 2022 10:19 AM

BaltACD

 

 
Convicted One
 
Euclid
the rotting will cause fill subsidence over time, 

That was my first thought. I guess my surprise is with the expectation that subsequent remedial action will be "little".  I mean if you are talking about a 25' fill, you are gonna have trestle members rotting 25' beneath the surface,

And, I'd think that the framing members would really interfere with compaction.  Isn't "compaction" the alpha and omega of site prep?

 

I would imagine that operating trains continually over the trestle that has been made into a fill would aid in the compaction process as the trestle structure will be subject to vibratory forces with every train the moves across it.

My understanding is that oxygen is required in the decay/rotting process.  The deeper timbers get buried in the fill, the less oxygen is available to sustain the process. 

 

 
That is very true.  Trains will deeply compact the fill over time, especially due to their impact vibrations from rail joints.  And timbers buried deep will have rot resistance due to a lack of oxygen.  Either too little oxygen or too little moisture will impede rotting.  That is why wooden fenceposts first rot through at ground level where the combination of oxygen and moisture is just right.  
 
C.O., You are right that compaction is the alpha and omega of site prep for structures.  But nevertheless, it has always been compromised, especially going back in time of earlier railroad construction.  But while the excavating/grading I describe was state of the art back then, today it has been replaced by motor scrapers, push cats, backhoes, off-road dump trucks to handle the cutting and hauling.  Then the material is unloaded at the fill site, and pushed into the fill with a dozer, and graded out into 6" loose lifts, with each lift being power compacted to the compaction specification, which is tested periodically to make sure it complies.  
 
So today, a railroad fill would be thoroughly engineered from top to bottom.  Not only would compaction be assured, but also the soil would be of the proper grade of soil type and moisture content to assure that the soil is ideally compactable.  A blend of gravel and some clay content is ideal.  Soil composed of pure clay is horrible, and so is organic soil such as black dirt topsoil. 
 
 
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Posted by CMStPnP on Thursday, November 10, 2022 10:26 AM

I have to comment though since one of the railroads mentioned has a pretty good reputation in my view.    Milwaukee road drained a swamp in Menominee valley in Milwaukee and built a series of drainage / shipping canals as well as a railroad shop complex on it.    They also did pretty well traversing more than one swamp West of Milwaukee on the way to the Twin Cities and in Brookfield with the branch to Waukesha.     I would venture to guess they were fairly good about building on swamp land.

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Posted by Convicted One on Thursday, November 10, 2022 11:21 AM

BaltACD
I would imagine that operating trains continually over the trestle that has been made into a fill would aid in the compaction process as the trestle structure will be subject to vibratory forces with every train the moves across it.

Perhaps those  are the same vibratory forces and collateral subsidence that induce "bouncing" track structure?

 

Perhaps that helps explain why I see the MOW guys so frequently with their little thermite doo-hickey in the vicinity of the   yellow arrow?  Pirate   (CWR)

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Thursday, November 10, 2022 12:36 PM

My first thought was that the wood underground would rot away slower than wood out in the open, and as that slowly happened, the fill would work it's way into the voids.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Thursday, November 10, 2022 12:44 PM

This is a reply to several posts on this thread.

The line is in Sioux Falls SD next to Southeastern Avenue, north of 41st street. The Milwaukee line is probably graded the same as it was when built. The Rock Island line went out in the 70s. It makes sense that a Milwaukee main line was built to higher standards than a Rock Island branch line. It seems like RI got into the state after the better routes were taken.

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Posted by jeffhergert on Thursday, November 10, 2022 1:20 PM

After my post, I looked up some info.  The BCR&N reached Sioux Falls October 25, 1886.  It was under control of the RI at that time.

Speculation at the time was that RI, through BCR&N, was going to build to Bismarck ND and a connection to the NP.  This was through the line that ended at Watertown SD.  The Sioux Falls branch came off this line at Ellsworth MN.  IIRC, a bridge went out in the early 1970s and the branch, now originating out of Estherville IA was cut back to Rock Rapids IA.

The line from Estherville to Superior IA is still operated by UP.  The line west of Superior is gone.  See this discussion from days of yore. https://cs.trains.com/trn/f/111/t/229115.aspx

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Posted by Convicted One on Thursday, November 10, 2022 1:31 PM

Murphy Siding
, and as that slowly happened, the fill would work it's way into the voids.

If I was a deep pocket, I don't know how cozy I would be making the assumption that the settling and filling would happen uniformly?

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Posted by mudchicken on Thursday, November 10, 2022 2:48 PM

The "scoop" Bucky is talking about is the ubitquious "Fresno Scraper" that started in 1883 and were still in use past WW1 until Holt Tractor/CAT really got into the picture. They could be anything from half a pony-keg up to half a 55 gallon drum in size. They contributed much to later bulldozer and motor grader designs plus the horses' hooves added excellent compactive effort. 

Railroad standards have evolved over the years as railroads and regular civil engineers began to better understand soil properties and slope stability issues. 1:1 slopes gave way to 2:1 and now 3:1 in places. It all depends on how soils hold together  and the mix of fines to everything up to cobbles in the made fill. Gap graded materials tend to fail depending on what you've got.

Jeff: intimately familiar with the BCR&N west of Superior. Kinda sad what happened there. (Uncle Pete demanded a siding on the resulting shortline and would not allow the shortline to interchange at Superior not helping was the fact was UP/CNW did not own the underlying R/W and the people that did were not railroaders - ugly/greedy arrangement that ulimately killed the line.)

I will come back and verify the construction dates and original railroads. Not hard to do if you know what ICC GO-20 is and where to find those submittals. The ROCK lines were all part of the fabled CRIP "bow and arrow country" that were all low density lines that were not high speed and not well taken care of.

UPDATE:

BNSF/MILW = McGregor & Sioux City Ry. (Graded 1878) taken over by Sioux City and Dakota Railway in 1879 and completed.

CRIP (abandoned line) Cedar Rapids, Iowa Falls and Northwestern RR (BCRN of Iowa) 1886......Abandoned 12-29-70 FD-26470...removed by 1973

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Posted by diningcar on Thursday, November 10, 2022 2:49 PM

The BNSF Southern Transcon is currently the fastest and most reliable route between Pacific water and Chicago; and it became this way by many changes from original construction; like Abo Canyon recently. Without a doubt the greatest contributor was the Williams - Crookton line change in the Arizona mountains in 1959 -60. 

The original 1882 construction was 49 miles of single track, with a second track created (in steps) in the 1920's. Some of the segments had 2.6% grades and curves of up to 10 degrees. It was a 20 MPH operation in many locations. 

The relocated line was 44 miles in length, with maximum 1% grades and one degree curves. To accomplish these parameters there were rock cuts up to 110 feet deep, with the longest being 13,000 feet. The highest fill was 122 feet and the longest was 6000 feet.

The design also avoided slack action. From Williams Junction the line descended  32 miles on 1% grade where it intersected a 0.85 % ascending grade. This was designed with a 10,000 foot vertical curve making the change .085 per 100 feet. 

It was superelevated with spirals on each curve end which would permit 70 mph freight trains and 90 mph passenger trains. 

The most amazing thing is that this was all accomplished in sixteen months. The contractor - Morrison-Knudsen - worked two nine-hour shifts six days a week. The first train - Santa Fe's The Chief went over the line on December 19, 1960.

I had the honor and pleasure of being one of Santa Fe's engineering technicians who set all the stakes and control points for the contractor.

  

 

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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, November 10, 2022 5:03 PM

Convicted One

 

 
Murphy Siding
, and as that slowly happened, the fill would work it's way into the voids.

 

If I was a deep pocket, I don't know how cozy I would be making the assumption that the settling and filling would happen uniformly?

 

The filled dirt would work its ways into voids left by rotting timbers over time.  But it is not much of a practical problem.  Even if a void forms, that does not mean that gravity will readily fill it with fill dirt from above, and work the void upward like a sink hole that finally breaks through the surface. 

Soil that has filled around the pole that evenually rots has a fair amount of bridging ability, so many formed voids will simply remain undisplaced with setting fill. 

Also, this was in the 1880-1920 era when filling trestles was most common.  People then were not necessarily looking for the perfect solution.  The effect of leaving sizable voids is not much different than simply failing to compact the original fill with anything beyond horses or related equipment.  

As such, gradual settling will occur.  When it does, they just haul more fill to the site and build up the the settled areas.   Therefore, many fills are being gradually perfected over time.  

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Posted by Convicted One on Friday, November 11, 2022 12:28 PM

Euclid
As such, gradual settling will occur.  When it does, they just haul more fill to the site and build up the the settled areas.   Therefore, many fills are being gradually perfected over time.  

I found a wonderful picture of them performing the trestle-fill operation in my own town back in 1911 when the mains were grade seperated. Unfortunately I do not hold the rights to said picture, and do not want to set off  the IP alarmists.....but it's a great picture showing the fill operation in progress.

SO yeah, it obviously was "done that way"...but again I personally don't have a lot of confidence that the rot, the settling, and the refilling will happen at uniform rates.  Heart wood rots  differently from  the layers around it in my experience, open grain versus closed, etc etc too many variables.

But, as I mentioned earlier, most of the "bouncing track" instances that I have witnessed personally, are on those raised embankments....particularly where they abutt bridges and other viaducts....so perhaps those buzzards ARE coming home to roost.

 

And it never really ocurred to me previously why when I  periodically see the thermite crews at work, it was usually on the raised embankments right next to one of those bridges. So, this is a definite "ah haaa" moment for me. Cool

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Posted by tree68 on Friday, November 11, 2022 1:06 PM

I'd imagine there was a sort of a natural compaction of the dirt, falling (at first) some 100' in some cases.

I've seen pictures of the process as well, but don't recall where.

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