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Dual gauge

A dual-gauge or mixed-gauge railway has railway track that allows trains of different gauges to use the same track. Generally dual-gauge railway consists of three rails, rather than the standard two rails. The two outer rails give the wider gauge, while one of the outer rails and the inner rail give a narrower gauge. Thus one of the three rails is common to all traffic. (This configuration is not to be confused with the electric third rail.)

Reasoning

In railways, the most important specification is that of gauge, the distance between the inner surfaces of the heads of the travel rails (see diagram). Both track and wheels (trucks, bogies) must be built to the same gauge: unless the two fit together nearly perfectly (within a tolerance of on the track, like Hong Kong MTR -gauge EMU's may run on KCR -gauge rails, with a locomotive or a KCR EMU pulling due to different electrify voltages), the train will either fall off the track or it will be impossible to go through switches or cross overs. A problem arises when different gauges meet one another, a situation known as a break of gauge. Either the track or the train must be built to handle different gauges, or passengers and freight must be taken off one train and loaded on to the next. In allowing railway tracks of different gauges to share the same alignment, costs can be reduced, especially where there are bridges and tunnels. Dual gauge can replace two separate tracks, having two rails each, with one track with three rails. This allows one rail fewer for the stretch of the dual gauge line, but there are complications and costs that may offset the savings. One issue is points (US: switches). Complicated arrangements are necessary to ensure traffic of both gauges can safely utilise points. Signalling may also be complicated somewhat, as all three rails must be connected to track circuits or mechanical interlocking arrangements. Mixed gauge is simpler to signal with electric signals than with mechanical signals. Since rails wear very slowly, the extra tonnage on the common rail is generally not a problem. Dual-gauge turnouts will be complicated, expensive, and suitable for low speeds only.

Configuration

For dual-gauge track to be achievable using three rails, the difference between the gauges needs to be at least as wide as the foot of the rail, otherwise there is no room for the rail fastening hardware (spikes, clips, and the like). Thus standard gauge () and Indian gauge can be dual gauged without problem, while and ( Irish gauge) can also be dual-gauged, albeit with lighter narrow footed rails, as in Victoria, Australia. On the other hand, metre gauge and cape gauge as in Africa, or and , as in South America, are too close to be combined into three-rail dual gauge, as are and . This last combination is of particular historical interest, as one of the main reasons that 1520mm was adopted in Russia was to stop western trains from being able to use Russian railways during an invasion. It was of strategic significance during World War II. If three-rail dual gauge is impossible (e.g. between and ), four-rail dual gauge has to be used.

Configuration for Africa

and gauges in Africa are too close to allow three-rail dual gauge: four-rail dual gauge is required. With a little care, the sleepers for this dual gauge configuration can be made to support triple gauge, including standard gauge (), at little extra cost. Africa is particularly affected by gauge problems, where railways of different gauges in adjacent countries meet. An advantage of the four-rail dual gauge track is that the four rails can be combined to give some of the greater strength of two rails of double the weight. This allows the old rails to be reused, instead of being scrapped or used for low-value fenceposts.RailwaysAfrica

Example in Africa

2007

2006

An Indian proposal surfaced to link Benin and Togo on the coast with landlocked Burkina Faso and Niger. The other adjacent states of Ghana and Nigeria use the incompatible 1067 mm gauge. With the future in mind, steel and concrete sleepers, at least between stations, can and should cater for three gauges: 1000 mm, 1067 mm and 1435 mm.

2004

On 12 October 2004, a proposal was announced to develop an electrified rail link connecting Kenya, Uganda and south Sudan. Even though Kenya and Uganda use 1000 mm gauge and Sudan uses 1067 mm, the new project was proposing to use standard gauge (1435 mm). Fortunately, all three gauges can be supported by the same sleepers, as described above.

Configuration for Afghanistan and other countries

A triple gauge sleeper for all three neighbouring gauges can be made with five rails. Because the gaps between the rails are reasonably large, gauge-splitting turnouts are practical.

Gauge conversion

If the gauge is to be reduced, then the sleepers can continue to protrude from the side of the rails. If the gauge is to be increased, then the sleepers used for narrow gauge may be too short, and some at least of these 'short' sleepers will have to be replaced with longer ones. Alternatively the rails may be too light for the loads imposed by broader-gauge railcars. Such potential problems can rule out dual-gauge as a feasible option. Another issue is affixing the rails to the sleepers (spikes, nails or bolts are used). If existing sleepers are wooden, extra holes can be drilled without problems. If the existing sleepers are concrete, then drilling extra holes is impractical, and the whole sleeper has to be replaced, unless extra boltholes are already allowed for. The embankment could need widening too. It is possible that viaducts and tunnels are too narrow and too low. This could cost a lot and need the closing of the line for a year or two. During the conversion of the Melbourne-Adelaide railway in Australia from to , dual gauge with heavy rails was not possible as the rail footings were too wide. A special gauge-convertible sleeper with a reversible chair for the Pandrol clip allowed a two-week conversion process. In the Adelaide metropolitan area, broad-gauge timber sleepers are being replaced with gauge-convertible concrete sleepers. On June 5, 2008, the South Australian Government announced that the Metropolitan Network would be converted to standard gauge (1435 mm) in 2012.{{cite web |url=http://www.infrastructure.sa.gov.au/RR |title=Rail Revitalisation|accessdate=2008-08-25 |publisher=South Australian Department of Transport, Energy and Infrastructure.}} Dual-gauge lines in Java were regauged from to ( Cape gauge) during the Japanese administration in 1942-1943. Regauging occurred only on the relatively short Brumbung-Kedungjati-Gundih main line and the Kedungjati- Ambarawa branch line, as the rest of the line was already dual-gauge (some only recently dual-gauged).

Proposed or current gauge conversions

Examples

In the Czech Republic, there is dual gauge ( and ) track near Jindřichův Hradec. The two gauges are used by different railway companies. In Britain, the Great Western Railway was initially broad gauge, . After the "gauge war", it was decided to regauge the GWR. As the broad gauge was sufficiently dissimilar from standard gauge and used wooden sleepers, dual gauge was easily introduced. The Metropolitan Railway, part of the London Underground system, started as dual gauge: its current third and fourth rails are for electricity supply, not dual gauge. In Ireland, dual-gauge track was not used in regauging the Ulster Railway (UR). When it regauged its double-track route from to the new Irish standard of it performed the task in two stages. The Dublin & Drogheda Railway (D&DR) meanwhile was regauging from , too similar to the new gauge to allow dual gauge. Dual gauge was used in Derry, by the Port Authority, in an on-street network to transfer goods, on either gauge, between the city's four stations (two narrow gauge, two in broad gauge). In Italy, dual-gauge track is used in the Potenza - Avigliano Lucania line, and . In Western Australia there is a double-track dual-gauge ( & ) main line from East Perth to Northam, about 120 km. Dual-gauge track is also used from the triangle at Woodbridge to Cockburn Junction, then to Kwinana on one branch, and North Fremantle on the other. In Brisbane, Australia, shorter stretches of dual-gauge track ( & ) exist between the rail freight yards at Acacia Ridge and the Port of Brisbane, for freight trains. A dual-gauge line branches off at Park Road Station to run alongside the electric suburban narrow gauge Citytrain line over the Merivale Bridge into Platform 1 at Roma Street Station. This is used by standard-gauge interstate CountryLink XPT services to Sydney. In Belgium, some sections of tram track in Brussels combined metre gauge for the interurban trams with standard gauge for the urban trams. Since the closure of the former, these have been replaced with standard gauge track. In Stuttgart, Germany, the tram lines were gauge. In the 1970s it was decided to convert the streetcar system to a modern Stadtbahn and regauge it to standard gauge to increase capacity. Inner-city tunnels replacing street-level sections in busy streets were built with a cross-section suitable for standard-gauge cars. After the conversion started in 1981 with the commissioning of the first three class DT-8 Stadtbahn cars, the tunnels and all other sections used by multiple lines were fitted with / dual-gauge track, to allow both old-style streetcars and new Stadtbahn cars to share those sections while lines were converted one by one over the next decades. In 2006, conversion of line 15 (the last line to be converted) is under way and was completed in 2008, although some sections will retain their dual-gauge track indefinitely as a courtesy to the streetcar museum of Stuttgart, which will operate old gauge streetcars on weekends and special occasions. In Switzerland dual gauge track ( standard and meter) is used in ( Lucerne and Interlaken) stations at both ends of the Brünigbahn and on the RhB between Chur and Domat Ems (see first illustration of this article), among other places. In Japan, dual gauge is used when standard gauge Shinkansen lines joins the narrow-gauge () system, which is the national standard. For example, part of the Ōu line became part of the Akita Shinkansen and was upgraded to dual gauge. In Dutch East Indies (later Indonesia), dual-gauge track was installed in 1899 between Yogyakarta and Solo. The track was owned by the Nederlandsch-Indische Spoorweg Maatschappij, a private company, which built the gauge line in 1867. The third rail was installed to allow passengers and goods traveling over the gauge Staatsspoorweg (State Railway) a direct connection without requiring transfer at both cities. Later, a separate pair of tracks were installed at the government's cost to allow greater capacity and higher speeds. In 1940 a third rail was installed between Solo and Gundih on the line to Semarang, allowing gauge trains to travel between Semarang, Solo and Yogyakarta (via Gambringan, on the line to Surabaya instead of via Kedungjati on the original line). A short section of dual-gauge and line existed in North Sumatra on a joint line of the Deli Railway and the Aceh Tramway. This line survived in to the 1970s. Some sugar mill railways in Java have dual-gauge sections. In Vietnam, there is dual gauge ( meter and standard) between Hanoi and the Chinese border. The length of Vietnam railway network In Sweden and Finland, there is 2 km of dual gauge, and , between Haparanda and Tornio across the bridges over the border. At each end of the dual-gauge section there are yards with standard and Finnish gauge areas to allow for transshipment. The four-rail method is used because the gauges are close together. The bridge structure needs to be wider than normal to allow for the offset from the centreline by each gauge. At the Tornio yard is a Rafil gauge changer. In Los Angeles the Los Angeles Railway and the Pacific Electric Railway (both defunct) ran on dual gauge track on some downtown streets. In Spain, there is dual gauge in the AVE line from Zaragoza to Huesca, usable for both high speed trains () and standard Spanish trains ().

Double dual gauge

In Australia, the new railway line between Perth and Northam was being planned in the 1960s. The improved alignment was originally intended to have separate standard gauge and narrow gauge tracks running parallel, with crossing loops at intervals. However, the capacity of each of these lines would have been poor. By adopting double-track dual-gauge throughout, the line capacity was greatly increased, at only the relatively small extra cost of providing a third rail was needed for dual gauge.

Triple gauge

There have been a few instances of triple-gauge break-of-gauge stations. Because these three triple-gauge examples were yards operating at low speed, light rail could be used to space the rails closely together if required. Main line operation at high speeds is another matter. The Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge originally carried trains of three different gauges. The National Railway Museum (Port Adelaide) in Adelaide, Australia has the three main-line gauges and a gauge tourist line.

Accidents on dual-gauge railways

In Western Australia, the signalling system detects the gauge of the approaching trains and puts the signals to stop if the route is set for the wrong gauge.

Complexity of dual-gauge switches

, France]] Dual-gauge turnouts (also known as switches or points), where both gauges have a choice of routes, are quite complicated, with more moving parts than single-gauge turnouts. They impose very low speed limits. If dual-gauge points are operated and detected by electrical circuits, their reliability will be high. Where two gauges separate (i.e. each gauge has only one route, as in the picture at right), few if any moving parts are needed.

Paradox

If the two gauges of a dual gauge turnout are very similar and the difference between them is small, turnouts will have many small pieces that are difficult to support and the turnout will be weak and limited in speed. Paradoxically, the larger the difference the better. The difference between the gauges should as a rule of thumb be 50 mm greater than the width of the base of the rails. The three most common gauges in Africa when configured as above have relatively large differences between the gauges and the turnout will be relatively strong and its speeds will be reasonable. Conversely, the three gauges found on the borders of Afghanistan are too similar. Also the difference between standard and East European/Russian gauge is too similar.

Gauge splitters

One way of avoiding complicated and weak dual gauge turnouts, provided there is room, is to separate the gauges and then design the yard with single gauge turnouts and dual gauge diamond crossings.http://gallery.qrig.org/v/users/Alantrains/Roma+St/DCP_0005.JPG.html Roma Street gauge splitter 3-Rail, 4-Rail and transition Gauge splitters assume that trains have a single gauge. Gauge splitters may be fixed, meaning they have no moving parts and are intended for low speed use, or they be power operated like ordinary turnouts.

Separate gauge

If dual-gauge turnouts are too slow, or too difficult because the gauges are too similar, then an option is to build two separate lines, one of each gauge, side by side. This choice also depends on the amount of traffic. Dual-gauge could continue to be employed at an expensive bridge or tunnel. Examples include:
  • Albury, New South Wales to Melbourne, Victoria, 300 km
  • * As the old and original broad gauge track declines in use, it is slated for conversion to standard gauge, replacing parallel standard-gauge single track and broad-gauge double track with a double-track standard-gauge line. This will reduce delays on the standard-gauge line at crossing loops.
  • Melbourne Victoria, to Geelong, Victoria, 80 km, a single standard-gauge line parallel to double-track broad gauge.
  • Yogyakarta- Solo in Java, Dutch East Indies during pre-WW II days, 58 km. This had a single line parallelling a dual-gauge and line.
  • In 2005 a proposed standard gauge line connecting Iran with China via several broad gauge Central Asian countries will use a mixture of parallel separate lines and dual gauge (denied by Russia and India).
  • Australia - in 1960, the Perth to Northam line was originally to be separate side-by-side narrow gauge and standard gauge lines, but it was realised that line capacity would be much higher if it were built as double dual gauge.

Overlapping gauges

Bangladesh is tackling its break of gauge problem by adding a third rail to its broad and narrow gauge lines, so that it becomes a mainly dual-gauge system. The new Jamuna Bridge that links the east and west rail systems is four rail dual gauge so that both gauges use the same centre-line. At some stage Bangladesh may choose one gauge over the other and convert to a single gauge, but there are no immediate plans for this. Bangladesh's neighbour to the east is also 1000 mm gauge, should the missing link ever be built. A variation of overlapping gauge is to extend a railway of one gauge into territory that is mainly of another gauge so as to avoid transhipment of specific traffic. For example a 1524 mm gauge line from an iron ore mine in Ukraine to a steelworks in Slovakia, which now may be extended into Austria.

Other methods of handling multiple gauges

Other methods of handling multiple gauges include:
  • Transporter wagons or transporter trucks, which carry equipment of one gauge on the other's tracks. This can be also done by the trainload. Bridges and tunnels need to be about one metre higher than they would otherwise be.
  • Bogie exchange systems, where the railroad car is lifted and the trucks/bogies under it are swapped. This system is not suitable for four-wheel wagons.
  • Adjustable gauge equipment ( variable gauge axles), in which the wheel gauge can be widened or narrowed.
  • Transshipment, where containers or people are transferred from one set of railroad cars to another.

Dual gauge dual voltage

A mini- metro in Gijon, Spain is to be both dual gauge (1000 mm/1668 mm) and dual voltage (1500 V DC/3000 V DC).

See also

Notes

External links

"green air" © 2007 - Ingo Malchow, Webdesign Neustrelitz
This article based upon the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/dual_gauge, the free encyclopaedia Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Further informations available on the list of authors and history: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=dual_gauge&action=history
presented by: Ingo Malchow, Mirower Bogen 22, 17235 Neustrelitz, Germany