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CE 515 Railroad Engineering Hump Yard Design Source: Lecture Notes – CE 353 by Reg Souleyrette “Transportation exists to conquer space and time -”

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Presentation on theme: "CE 515 Railroad Engineering Hump Yard Design Source: Lecture Notes – CE 353 by Reg Souleyrette “Transportation exists to conquer space and time -”"— Presentation transcript:

1 CE 515 Railroad Engineering Hump Yard Design Source: Lecture Notes – CE 353 by Reg Souleyrette “Transportation exists to conquer space and time -”

2 Classification (Hump) Yard Photo: www.bilderberg.org/railways

3 Factors to Consider Size of yard (number of tracks/length) Resistance Acceleration on grade Maximum impact speed Safety

4 Classification (Hump) Yard Source: Dr. Souleyrette’s Lecture Notes

5 General Guidelines Hump grades: 4% (100-200 ft.) Transition: 1.5% Switching: 1.2% Classification track: 0.1-0.5% Spacing: 14-18 feet on centers Turnouts: #7-10

6 Retarders Photo: www.wikipedia.orgPhoto: www.sigrail.com

7 Too Much? Source: railpictures.net

8 Engineering It All Energy balance equation: KE 1 + Y 1 = KE 2 +Y 2 – (M K X + S W + C R + W R + E R ) KE: Kinetic Energy (v 2 /(2g)) Y: Elevation head, (ft) X: Horizontal distance, (ft) M K : Static rolling resistance, (lb/ton) (typ. 2-18) S W : Losses due to passing through switch, (ft) (typ. 0.02-0.06) C R : Curve losses, (ft) (typ. 0.025 ft/º of angle) W R : Wind loss (air resistance), (ft) (next slide) E R : Energy extracted by retarders, (ft) (next slide)

9 Energy Losses Air resistance (Davis equation): KAV 2 * X Wn Retarders: – Variable, up to 0.11 ft. of head/ft. of retarder – Typical minimum length of 20 ft. – Double if retarders on both rails

10 Vertical/Horizontal Curves Vertical Curves – Minimum length (ft.): L = A * C A: Algebraic difference in grades, % C: Constant dependent on curve type – C = 15 for hump crest – C = 40 for other crests – C = 60 for sag curves Horizontal Curves – Maximum of 12.5º

11 Car Velocity Consider headway to allow throwing of switches V s = L c + H * V h L c – V s : Velocity at switch – V h : Velocity at hump (release) – L c : Length of car (avg. 60 ft.) – H: Headway (typ. 60 ft.) Coupling velocity of 6 ft/s (4 mph)

12 Examples Grade leading to hump = +1.0% Grade after hump = -3.5% – Min. Length L = A * C – L = (1.0 – (-3.5)) * 15 – L = (4.5) * 15 = 67.5 feet

13 Examples Grade after hump = -3.5% Grade leading to switches = -1.5% – Min. Length L = A * C – L = (-3.5 – (-1.5)) * 60 – L = (-2) * 60 = -120 ft.  120 ft.

14 Sample Calculations KE A = v 2 /(2g) = (7) 2 /(2*32.2) = 0.76 ft Elev. Chg. = -X * (%)/100 = -130 * (-3.7)/100 = 4.81 ft M K loss = X * M K /2000 = 130 * 18/2000 = 1.17 ft Net = EC – S W – C R – M K = 4.81 – 0 – 0 – 1.17 = 3.64 ft KE B = KE A + Net = 0.76 + 3.64 = 4.40 ft PointLength (ft)Gradient (%)Elev. Chg. (ft)Sw (ft)Cr (ft)Mk (ft)Net (ft) KE v (ft/s) A 0.76 7.00 130-3.74.81001.173.64 B 4.40 16.83 120-1.31.560.030.161.080.29 C 4.69 17.38

15 Other Calculations C R = 0.025 * º of central angle W R : As discussed previously

16 Side Note: Targets Source: wikipedia.org

17 Questions?


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