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Stopping Distance

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Stopping Distance
Posted by TusSagBay on Friday, August 11, 2006 8:49 PM

Hello;

I just returned from a trip to NE Kansas.  While there I made a train watching stop at Perry and had the fortune of speaking with a UP Lineman working on a Grade Crossing.  As we talked a Coal Drag passed and I asked about how fast it was going.  He said 30 to 35.  He went on to say that the max speed for coal trains was 39 mph explaining that a loaded 100 car coal train moving at 50mph will require 2 1/2 miles to stop.   That astonished me and after thinking about I began to wonder if that might not be excessive.  A friend directed me to a web site dealing with stopping distance but I'm unable to make heads or tails of it.  Can anyone provide some imput?

Thank You,    TSB

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Posted by CShaveRR on Friday, August 11, 2006 8:58 PM

I'm not sure on which line the maximum speed would be 39.  49 is the maximum for an unsignalled line.  UP allows its coal trains 50 m.p.h. on lines on which the freight train timetable speed is 50 or better.

This doesn't address the issue of stopping distance, because others are more qualified than I to answer that question.

Carl

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Posted by nbrodar on Saturday, August 12, 2006 1:12 AM

Look at it this way, a loaded coal train can weigh in excess of 15,000 tons.   15,000 tons moving at 50 MPH is alot of energy to arrest.   So 2 1/2 miles is not out of line.

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Posted by Chris30 on Saturday, August 12, 2006 1:25 AM

I don't have the answer to the stopping distance, just another related question. If the loaded coal train has a DPU on the end, how much does that reduce the braking distance?

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Posted by zardoz on Saturday, August 12, 2006 7:03 AM

A full service application will stop a loaded coal train going 50mph on flat ground in about 1.5 miles; an emergency application will stop it in about half of that distance. 

Factors affecting the stopping distance are: temperature, grade (uphill or downhill), dynamic brakes (or the lack thereof), ice/snow accumulated in brake rigging, and to a lesser extent the condition of the rail.

A coal train (or any unit train) can usually be put directly into emergency without much risk of derailment due to all the freight cars are of equal length and weight.  A manifest train with mixed loads and empties distributed at random needs much more care on how quickly the brakes are applied.  A poorly blocked train (empties in front / loads on the rear) require muck more delicate applications of brakes (either dynamic or air) due to the likelyhood of undesireable slack action.

A suburban train can stop (under ideal conditions) from 70mph in about 1/2 mile.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Saturday, August 12, 2006 7:14 AM
 zardoz wrote:

  A poorly blocked train (empties in front / loads on the rear) require muck more delicate applications of brakes (either dynamic or air) due to the likelyhood of undesireable slack action.

      Why is that?  Would the loaded cars in back *bump* the empties hard enough to derail them?

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Posted by nbrodar on Saturday, August 12, 2006 9:17 AM

Full service, and emergency braking are bad ways to stop a train at speed.  While it probably won't put anything on the ground, it's a great way to snap a knuckle or pull a drawhead.   According by latest Train Handling manual, air brakes are not to be used over 10 MPH (I think) except in an emergency.  Speed is to be regulated with throttle modulation, and dynamic braking.

DPUs may reduce the stopping distance, depending on the company's operating practices.  There are limits to the number of axles used for dynamic braking.    Improperly used dynamics will tear a train apart in seconds.  

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Posted by gabe on Saturday, August 12, 2006 9:33 AM

I have often read about the incredible amount of time it takes to stop high-speed passenger trains in Europe.  I know this sounds silly, but I have often wondered if such trains could use "air brakes" for increased stopping power in emergency situations. 

I know I will be laughed off the forum for saying this, but a parachute or other types of emergency-applied wind resistant applications--such as are found on airplanes--would give an incredible amount of resistance for a train moving well over 140 mph.  If every car had such an emergency "air brake" integrated into its roof and the rear car and had an emergency parachute, I would have to think that the combined wind resistance would be formidable.  Also, with the relatively light weight of passenger trains, such wind resistance might make a noticeable difference.

I know I should post such things at night so I can claim I was drunk when I wrote them, but it is something that always crossed my mind.  Let the mockery begin . . . .

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Posted by zardoz on Saturday, August 12, 2006 10:10 AM
 Murphy Siding wrote:
 zardoz wrote:

  A poorly blocked train (empties in front / loads on the rear) require muck more delicate applications of brakes (either dynamic or air) due to the likelyhood of undesireable slack action.

      Why is that?  Would the loaded cars in back *bump* the empties hard enough to derail them?

Exactly.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Saturday, August 12, 2006 10:14 AM
     Well.....given the fact that a parachute might snag a pole or bridge and have some *extra*, unintended braking power, wouldn't an anchor be about as useful?    //searches for rolling eyes smiley//Tongue [:P]

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Saturday, August 12, 2006 10:18 AM

Claiming inebriation is a safe statement if you were posting at 1:00 AM but I'll still be polite since the only dumb question is the one that you don't ask.

When SNCF set the speed record of 205 MPH in 1955 or so, I read that the windows on the trailing coaches had to be opened after the speed run in order to create wind resistance to help stop the train, so your mind is thinking reasonably.  If you're thinking of something along the lines of speed brakes on a modern fighter, the main problem that I can see is the clearance diagram.  A lot of catenary could get pulled down when the speed brakes are deployed.

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Posted by zardoz on Saturday, August 12, 2006 10:27 AM
 gabe wrote:

 Let the mockery begin . . . .

Gabe

Gee, where to begin..........?

 

 

Just kidding. 

My take on it though is that even though passenger trains are "relatively" light, they are still very heavy.  The parachute might work to some extent, but not to any appreciable effect.  And then there is the issue of overhead wires and bridges, and who / how would the chute get repacked after use? 

I have often tried to think of ways to stop faster. 

Years ago some passenger trains in the US (at least on the CNW) had cast-iron brakeshoes.  While these offered significantly greater braking effort on dry, clean rail, the shoes also caused the wheels to slide very easily on any rail that was not in the clean, dry condition.  This sliding of wheels caused many flats spots on the equipment, which is why they were discontinued from use.

Another problem to overcome would be the amount of momentum that a quickly-stopping train would transfer to the rails and subsequently to the roadbed.  Mudchicken would have much more info regarding this.  But I would venture to say that enough force transfered to the rails could cause a sunkink-like deformation of the roadbed or rails.

 

I remember learning (but I do not remember where, so don't quote me) that it takes about 20 miles to make a station stop with the TGV, and about 5 miles for an 'emergency' stop.  These distances sound excessive, and I wonder if anyone has any info regarding this. The 5-mile 'emergency' I consider possible, but the 20-mile seems a bit long.  [Remember, at 180mph, it is travelling 3 miles per minute, so I can easily imagine taking a minute of more to stop from that speed.]

 

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Saturday, August 12, 2006 11:15 AM
     Gabe: Perhaps what you are describing would be along the order of a train car that had some sort of braking flaps that extend out from the outter body of car to make a much bigger wind resistance target?  Think of those ugly, dancing lizards that can puff up the ruffled skin around their necks to appear bigger to predators.  To work, the car would have to be designed so that the profile is no bigger than the width and height of the train itself.  You wouldn't ever know when such a braking application would be needed, and you wouldn't want to snag a bridge or plug a tunnel.

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Posted by gabe on Saturday, August 12, 2006 12:15 PM

To defend my hair brain idea:

I do not think it would take a large protruding brake to create a lot of resistance at speeds over 100 mph.  Cantenery is a good point to consider--and I was thinking of something similar that to the brakes used on fighter jets.  However, even if the brake would only protrude three feet from the roof of a car--so as not to interfere with the cantenery--or one foot from the side of the car, two of such brakes on every passenger car in the train would create a lot of wind resistence.

The excellent example of merely opening windows creating significant resistance, buttresses the claim that actual air brakes would creak considerable resistence.

As for the parachute, the problem of it becoming an anchor is well founded.  But, it doesn't have to be a 40-foot shute.  I think a five-foot shute would create a lot of resistance.  If it is jetisoned from the top of the car, I don't think there would be too much trouble.

Finally, this would not be for regular applications--just emergency braking--so repacking would not be a major issue.

Gabe

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Posted by CrazyDiamond on Saturday, August 12, 2006 12:26 PM
gabe,

Your ideas are not so hair brain. In fact we (this forum) had this discussion a year or so ago when I posted the same type of topic. I seem to remember one of the last responses to the thread was someone posting that there is a high speed train in Japan that uses air grabbers as part of its braking system. I seem to remember there was a web link posted as well. Anyone else remember this thread?
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Posted by Hugh Jampton on Saturday, August 12, 2006 1:44 PM
 gabe wrote:

To defend my hair brain idea:

I do not think it would take a large protruding brake to create a lot of resistance at speeds over 100 mph.  Cantenery is a good point to consider--and I was thinking of something similar that to the brakes used on fighter jets.  However, even if the brake would only protrude three feet from the roof of a car--so as not to interfere with the cantenery--or one foot from the side of the car, two of such brakes on every passenger car in the train would create a lot of wind resistence.

The excellent example of merely opening windows creating significant resistance, buttresses the claim that actual air brakes would creak considerable resistence.

As for the parachute, the problem of it becoming an anchor is well founded.  But, it doesn't have to be a 40-foot shute.  I think a five-foot shute would create a lot of resistance.  If it is jetisoned from the top of the car, I don't think there would be too much trouble.

Finally, this would not be for regular applications--just emergency braking--so repacking would not be a major issue.

Gabe



Not quite so hair braned,, OK,, matbe the parachute bit.

Behold,, the new breed of Shinkansen,, the Fastech, a 360km/h (that would be 225mph in normal speeds) rocket on rails that uses fold up baffle plates (they're nicknamed cats ears for obvious reasons)
http://www.popsci.com/popsci/bown2005/engineering/db11bd0e9b927010vgnvcm1000004eecbccdrcrd.html
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Posted by owlsroost on Saturday, August 12, 2006 1:54 PM
There is some technical stuff on TGV braking here - http://www.dsy.hu/thermo/pub13/p_bremond.htm

According to that, maximum emergency stopping distance from 300km/h (186mph) is 3500m (about 2 miles), and each passenger car axle is equiped with 4 brake discs - with wheel slide protection. Of course, normal service braking would use dynamic/regenerative braking as much as possible, and normal braking rates have to take account of passenger comfort too - you don't want the coffee sliding off the table Smile [:)]

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Posted by owlsroost on Saturday, August 12, 2006 2:11 PM
 zardoz wrote:

Years ago some passenger trains in the US (at least on the CNW) had cast-iron brakeshoes.  While these offered significantly greater braking effort on dry, clean rail, the shoes also caused the wheels to slide very easily on any rail that was not in the clean, dry condition.  This sliding of wheels caused many flats spots on the equipment, which is why they were discontinued from use.

Another problem to overcome would be the amount of momentum that a quickly-stopping train would transfer to the rails and subsequently to the roadbed.  Mudchicken would have much more info regarding this.  But I would venture to say that enough force transfered to the rails could cause a sunkink-like deformation of the roadbed or rails.

 

Cast-iron brakeshoes acting directly on the wheel treads have historically been the standard form of train braking. For higher performance braking (faster/heavier trains) brakeshoes fitted with composition friction materials (similar to that used for automotive brakes) have replaced them, or disc brakes are fitted instead - sometimes with wheel-slide protection added to cut down on wheel flats.

Tony

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Posted by jchnhtfd on Saturday, August 12, 2006 2:12 PM
Consider this, friends:  A Boeing 777 lands at about 140.  It has rubber on concrete tires (very very good traction), computer assisted brakes (they operate at absolutely maximum efficiency), big spoilers for drag on the wings, and some 60,000 pounds of reverse thrust.  It also takes a bit over a mile to stop.  Seems to me that trains, with none of those advantages, do pretty doggone well!
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Posted by zardoz on Saturday, August 12, 2006 3:18 PM
 owlsroost wrote:
 zardoz wrote:

Years ago some passenger trains in the US (at least on the CNW) had cast-iron brakeshoes.  While these offered significantly greater braking effort on dry, clean rail, the shoes also caused the wheels to slide very easily on any rail that was not in the clean, dry condition.  This sliding of wheels caused many flats spots on the equipment, which is why they were discontinued from use.

Another problem to overcome would be the amount of momentum that a quickly-stopping train would transfer to the rails and subsequently to the roadbed.  Mudchicken would have much more info regarding this.  But I would venture to say that enough force transfered to the rails could cause a sunkink-like deformation of the roadbed or rails.

 

Cast-iron brakeshoes acting directly on the wheel treads have historically been the standard form of train braking. For higher performance braking (faster/heavier trains) brakeshoes fitted with composition friction materials (similar to that used for automotive brakes) have replaced them, or disc brakes are fitted instead - sometimes with wheel-slide protection added to cut down on wheel flats.

Tony

Cast iron shoes may be standard on your side of the puddle, but I have not seen them in general use here since the early 70's.  And the cast shoes were far better at stopping a train on clean dry rail than the composition shoes (I'm only comparing direct stopping distances, not the increased maintenance costs associated with the cast shoes).

Another problem with the CI shoes is what is called 'build-up'.  As the shoe heats from the friction, a small amount of the metal is melted, and some of that fuses to the wheel.  Once begun, the process is self-sustaining because the small amount of the original build-up tends to collect even more build-up (due to its slightly elevated position on the wheel).  Soon you have a wheel which feels and sounds a bit like a small 'flat-spot' (of which most of us are familiar with). 

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Posted by csxengineer98 on Saturday, August 12, 2006 5:37 PM
no...emergancy is..full service is ok to stop with... the thing with going to full service is to make sure you set your first service reduction to get an application on the the train first...then you can do as deep as you want into the air without any problems... you have to remember that full service is a brake application at service rate.. the air exhosts slower out of the system then it dose in emergancy...  emergancy clamps all the brakes on as hard as it can to all the cars at exactly the same time...going to full service from relese without going first service will only disable the uniform application throught the train..insted of all the brakes setting up at exacty the same time with first service..you get a brake application simmiler to the AB brake valve..where it starts to apply from the end end to there rear first... you get some slack runin..but not as bad as if you went to emgergancy...also if you go into emergancy you disable the PC switch and will lose power after 10 seconds and on many units DB.  and you might be wanting them for a controlled stop... emergancy is just that...in an emergancy...and if you have to use that..odds are what is going to happen to the train behind you is the lest of your worries at that very moment in time...

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Posted by CrazyDiamond on Saturday, August 12, 2006 7:00 PM
<BLOCKQUOTE><table class="quoteOuterTable"><tr><td class="txt4"><img src="/trccs/Themes/default/images/icon-quote.gif">&nbsp;<strong>Hugh Jampton wrote:</strong></td></tr><tr><td class="quoteTable"><table width="100%"><tr><td width="100%" valign="top" class="txt4"><BLOCKQUOTE><table class="quoteOuterTable"><tr><td class="txt4"><img src="/trccs/Themes/default/images/icon-quote.gif">&nbsp;<strong>gabe wrote:</strong></td></tr><tr><td class="quoteTable"><table width="100%"><tr><td width="100%" valign="top" class="txt4"><p>To defend my hair brain idea:<br><br>I do not think it would take a large protruding brake to create a lot of resistance at speeds over 100 mph.  Cantenery is a good point to consider--and I was thinking of something similar that to the brakes used on fighter jets.  However, even if the brake would only protrude three feet from the roof of a car--so as not to interfere with the cantenery--or one foot from the side of the car, two of such brakes on every passenger car in the train would create a lot of wind resistence. </p>
<p>The excellent example of merely opening windows creating significant resistance, buttresses the claim that actual air brakes would creak considerable resistence.</p>
<p>As for the parachute, the problem of it becoming an anchor is well founded.  But, it doesn't have to be a 40-foot shute.  I think a five-foot shute would create a lot of resistance.  If it is jetisoned from the top of the car, I don't think there would be too much trouble.</p>
<p>Finally, this would not be for regular applications--just emergency braking--so repacking would not be a major issue.</p>
<p>Gabe</p></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></BLOCKQUOTE><br><br>Not quite so hair braned,, OK,, matbe the parachute bit.<br><br>Behold,, the new breed of Shinkansen,, the Fastech, a 360km/h (that would be 225mph in normal speeds) rocket on rails that uses fold up baffle plates (they're nicknamed cats ears for obvious reasons)<br><a href="http://www.popsci.com/popsci/bown2005/engineering/db11bd0e9b927010vgnvcm1000004eecbccdrcrd.html">http://www.popsci.com/popsci/bown2005/engineering/db11bd0e9b927010vgnvcm1000004eecbccdrcrd.html</a><br></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></BLOCKQUOTE>

"Blowing by the current record-holder—the French TGV, with a maximum operating speed of 186 mph—East Japan Railway’s Fastech 360 train will carry travelers at a top speed of 224 mph and is expected to hit speeds above 250 mph in test runs. This year East Japan Railway began testing a prototype with two uniquely shaped nose cones—at 52 feet, the longest ever—that reduce drag and noisy micropressure waves in tunnels. To stop quickly in an emergency, the Fastech 360 uses cat-ear-like spoiler brakes that pop out of the roof to increase air resistance. The trains will go into service around 2011."

You know its sad whenyou think about it.....over here in North American we can come up with a hundred reasons why we have to live with 60+ MPH trains and why high-spped trains can't work, yet in dozens of places around the world we are being shown we are rapidally becoming a 3rd world when it comes to technology and advancements in modern society living.
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Posted by CrazyDiamond on Saturday, August 12, 2006 7:01 PM
How come my quotes never display right?
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Posted by JSGreen on Saturday, August 12, 2006 11:05 PM

 jchnhtfd wrote:
Consider this, friends:  A Boeing 777 lands at about 140.  It has rubber on concrete tires (very very good traction), computer assisted brakes (they operate at absolutely maximum efficiency), big spoilers for drag on the wings, and some 60,000 pounds of reverse thrust.  It also takes a bit over a mile to stop.  Seems to me that trains, with none of those advantages, do pretty doggone well!

The Spoilers on commercial  aircraft  are more to "Spoil the Lift" than as a drag measure...spoiling the lift insures that the weight will get on the wheels, so the brakes will be effective, and not lock the wheels up and slide.  Notice that they are programmed to pop out as soon as there is a little weight on the wheels....it's called a Squat switch, because it deploys the spoilers when the aircraft squats on the landing gear...it also has to be armed to actually do that properly, otherwise it would interfere with trying to take off...

On military aircraft, and on some civil aircraft, actual speed brakes are used to deploy into the "slip stream", to create additional drag.  On light civil aircraft, this is one method of slowing down a very aerodynamic aircraft quickly to get to the correct approach and landing speed, it lets you keep your speed up untill just before configuring to actually land.  Otherwise, you would have to start "Coasting " well before the landing pattern...On military aircraft, speed brakes do the same thing, but it also allows (or requires) flying an approach with more power on the aircraft...retracting the speed brakes to gain more power is much quicker than the time required for the jet engine to "Spool Up" from near idle to full power...especially usefull when trying to land on a postage stamp at sea...sometimes called an Aircraft Carrier.  (OK, it looks big when you're standing on it, but try looking at it from 1000 ft up...)

Back to the high speed trains....just imagine what the maintenance requirements and additional complexity added by putting systems like that into an environment which must be articulated, and would have to work reliably to be able to count on it.  And the extra weight to carry around to use just twice in a life cycle of the car...

...I may have a one track mind, but at least it's not Narrow (gauge) Wink.....
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Posted by jockellis on Sunday, August 13, 2006 9:04 PM
G'day, Y'all,
Disk brakes were mentioned in a recent post. Are these ever used on freight cars? Seems like these would offer much less maintenance on wheels. The article in Model Railroader several months ago, noted that Budd advertisements boasted of much longer periods between maintenance on passenger car trucks when disk brakes were used.

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Posted by WSOR 3801 on Sunday, August 13, 2006 9:34 PM
On freight cars, simplicity is paramount.  Freight car trucks are 3 pieces.  The brake parts are mostly interchangeable.  On some cars you will stencilled "AAR 18 BRAKE BEAM".  That is what the shoes attach to.  Any manf. AAR 18 brake beam will fit that car.  Brake shoes can be changed in about a minute, needing only a prybar.  Wheelsets on freight cars can be changed out pretty quickly, just gravity holding things in place.  Passenger car trucks are far more complex, so changing wheels takes more time.  You also use the train air brakes more on a passenger train, keeping the train streched out to avoid slack action for the passengers, management, etc.  Budd disc brakes have the advantage there. 

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Posted by Hugh Jampton on Monday, August 14, 2006 4:47 AM
 jockellis wrote:
G'day, Y'all, Disk brakes were mentioned in a recent post. Are these ever used on freight cars? Seems like these would offer much less maintenance on wheels. The article in Model Railroader several months ago, noted that Budd advertisements boasted of much longer periods between maintenance on passenger car trucks when disk brakes were used.


I've seen them on freight cars over here, but never over there.
Disk brakes do reduce wheel wear by around 50%, but leave the wheel more succeptable to both rolling contact fatigue and contamination build up which reduces adhesion. Plus, the vehicles I've seen with disc brakes also have block brake handbrakes.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, August 14, 2006 5:12 AM

There are freight cars with high speed trucks and disc brakes, because they run in passenger trains - express freight cars.

 

What about a brake shoe that applies to the rail head instead of a wheel's circumference?  What if this shoe were several feet long?  I vagely remember something about this feature in some light rail trucks.

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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, August 14, 2006 5:26 AM

How about this, for an even more radical idea - Such a shoe containing field coils to apply said brake by attracting to the rail. 

What if these field coils worked in conjunction with a locomotive's dynamic brakes.

What if these same coils could repel the rails to reduce wheel loading!  Why go through the complexity and energy intensive magnetic levitation of a train completely from the rails, simply reduce wheel loading and friction!

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Posted by Hugh Jampton on Monday, August 14, 2006 6:34 AM
Don't rush off to the patent office just yet,, it's already been done.

Magnetic track brakes are used on trams and high speed tains for emergency braking, The theory is a brake carrier with coils and a friction surface is suspended between the wheels of a truck, When the coils are energised magnetic attraction pulls the carrier down and the friction surface contacts the rails and provides a retarding force. Currently these are only used for emergency and parking brakes because it is difficult to control the the braking rate.

Eddy current brakes use a non contact method where coils in the carrier induce currents in the rails which give a braking force. These were tried in Japan and Germany but they were found to heat the rails up too much and the induced currents in teh rails interfered with the signalling equipment.

The problem with using the DB power is that dynamic brakes produce a lot of current, I've seen figures as high as 700 amps per loco quoted, and that is not constant over the speed range of the train. Track brakes only work on 40 or so amps at 24 volts, so you'd need a heap of them to handle the power. Of course another difficulty is that freight cars don't have any electricity on them to operate the equipment anyway..

Reducing the loading on the train wheels is a bad thing. You need the load to generate both the tractive effort to get the train moving and also the forces needed to guide the train along the track, especially through curves.
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