Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.2 9/18/84; site brl-tgr.ARPA Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!cbosgd!ihnp4!qantel!dual!lll-crg!gymble!umcp-cs!seismo!brl-tgr!tgr!Dan_Bower%RPI-MTS.Mailnet@MIT-MULTICS.ARPA From: Dan_Bower%RPI-MTS.Mailnet@MIT-MULTICS.ARPA Newsgroups: net.railroad Subject: Track Message-ID: <1557@brl-tgr.ARPA> Date: Tue, 17-Sep-85 20:34:35 EDT Article-I.D.: brl-tgr.1557 Posted: Tue Sep 17 20:34:35 1985 Date-Received: Fri, 20-Sep-85 05:30:32 EDT Sender: news@brl-tgr.ARPA Lines: 90 The sections of track you saw being installed last year are called panels. The length of a panel is commonly 39' because that is the most common length of rail rolled in the states. 39' was chosen because a 39' rail handily fits in a 40' gondola. Consequently, 39' panels handily fit on 40' flat cars. To reduce the number of joints in track, rails of 78', 25m and others have been tried. This is nothing new. I've seen 60' rails that were rolled in 1902. However, long rails are gaining new popularity as methods of handling have improved. Rails are hot rolled from carbon steel. If the rails were cast, the resulting crystaline structure would be far too brittle. A cast rail could not be dependably bent around a curve, and it would break easily under the impact of a train. Rolling ingots into blooms, then into rails creates a far more malleable steel that is still hard enough to withstand a train without deforming. There is a tradeoff between hardness and malleability. The harder a rail, the better it will stand up against plastic deformation (steel deforming like butter, but slower). However, the harder the steel, the more likely it is to shatter. One way around this is to heat treat the rail after rolling. This involves reheating and quenching. The result is a harder but not so brittle steel. Some mills (USS) advocate hardening just the head, whereas others (Bethlehem) harden the whole rail. Another tact is to use special alloys. Molybdenum steel is available from CF&I. This has better performance than some heat treated rails at a competitive price. Having no special heat treating step, Moly steel is cheaper to produce. So why couldn't you roll rails of a train length? When rolling steel, you must keep a very consistent temperature throughout. It would be *very* expensive to maintain rolling temperature for a 1440' rail. Also, after rolling, rail steel must be very carefully and slowly cooled. This is to let hydrogen escape for within the rails. Hydrogen interstitials in steel make for very dangerous flaws in rail. So to roll very long rails, you would have to have an effective cooling pit as long as the rail. Thus rails are rolled in standard lengths and then welded together. Welding is most commonly done by the flash butt method. This is where you literally put a few thousand volts on one rail, ground the other and move the ends close enough to draw an arc. The heat of the arc melts the steel, and the rails are shoved together. The weld is left to cool and you move to the next weld. This process can be done with the rail in track, but the best quality is achieved at a stationary facility. The fastenings you saw ("staples and pretzels") are most likely Bethlehem Steel's "Lockspikes" and "Pandrol" clips. The advantage of this system is that it is resilient (springy, so the fastening gives a bit when the train goes by in lieu of pulling out of the tie). It is also such that a rail can be removed without disturbing the tie. Since rails invariably have different lives than wood ties, being able to change rails quickly without damaging the tie is important. With the system Bethlehem sells, the tie plates are fastened with the cotter-key-like spikes to the tie such that when the rails are set down, they are in gauge. (4' 8 1/2" in most of the Western world.) The rails are fastened with the spring clips that look like pretzels to the tie plates, and not directly to the tie. ("Pandrol" is a trademark of the British firm that holds the patent. An Englishman named Pandrol invented them just before WWII. Bethlehem holds the sole US license for Pandrol clip production. There are at least 2 competing designs, one American and one German, that have much the same advantages. Lockspikes are a Bethlehem invention, as far as I know. By the way, standard overall lengths for spikes range from 5 3/4" to 7 1/2". Remember, the tie itself is no more than 7" thick.) The "heat sinks" you saw are called rail anchors. Actually, they have nothing to do with direct heat transfer. They restrain the force of expansion and contraction due to heat and impact by gripping the rail on both sides of a tie. The tie is anchored by the ballast (that's why they call it ballast) and it doesn't move. (hopefully...) Under really wretched extremes, the rail will pull apart or buckle anyhow. If properly installed, it takes one heck of a heat wave or cold snap to do this. Separate rail anchors are not necessary with Pandrol clips. The clip holds the rail so tightly that they actually outperform standard anchors. By the way, if the rail that was replaced after a year was new when it when in, it was most likely not sold for scrap. There would have been a lot of life left in that rail yet. If it was new, the railroad might have taken it to a shop to be welded or reconditioned and used elsewhere. (If it wasn't new, then I wouldn't be surprised that the Seashore gang got 'em. They have a mainline extension project going on.) Brought to you by Super Global Mega Corp .com