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#22
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BrianW wrote:
In fairness, it was only supposed to be a light-hearted comment of mine. D'oh! :-) |
#23
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Though you have to wonder how the metro systems in places like
canada and oslo manage to run when its -20C and snow a metre deep. Because they get those conditions every winter and are completely geared up to dealing with them? No, actually, we don't. When Toronto had a storm in 1999 that did produce about 1 m of snow over two days, the above-ground parts of the subway system had numerous problems. It has top-contact third rail with a coverboard. Normally the trains brush the snow off the rail before enough can settle to cause a problem, and all they have to do in case of a snowstorm is to run some trains overnight on the above-ground sections; but with the big snowfall there was nowhere for the snow to be brushed *to*. The same storm caused similar results in Chicago, which is at about the same latitude but has uncovered third rail and their system is mostly elevated. In Montreal, on the other hand, snow is not an issue because the Metro is entirely below ground. -- Mark Brader, Toronto | "This man must be very ignorant, for he answers | every question he is asked." -- Voltaire My text in this article is in the public domain. |
#24
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#25
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On Fri, 07 Dec 2012 11:49:53 +0000
David Cantrell wrote: On Wed, Dec 05, 2012 at 01:48:38PM +0000, d wrote: On Wed, 05 Dec 2012 13:08:18 +0000 Anthony Polson wrote: We cannot cope with snow because we don't get it every year so are not Its becoming more common And your evidence for this is what? Sure, we've had snow for the last three (I think) winters, but you'd expect that to happen occasionally even in a region that hardly ever gets any snow. When did it last snow in the sahara? Anyway , the fact that it snows here at all should be enough for them to get their act together but every year it seems to come as a complete surprise that it snows in winter and every year we get the same tired old excuses. Its pathetic. B2003 |
#26
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#27
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In message , at 11:49:53
on Fri, 7 Dec 2012, David Cantrell remarked: we've had snow for the last three (I think) winters, but you'd expect that to happen occasionally even in a region that hardly ever gets any snow. It snowed in Nottingham when my children were about 13 or 14 (but only for a day) and they said it was the first time their locally brought up friends had ever seen snow. They, on the other hand, have lived in several other parts of the country and are quite familiar with it, even to the extent of being disappointed at winters were there's not enough snow to make a snowman. -- Roland Perry |
#28
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On Fri, 07 Dec 2012 12:04:52 +0000
David Cantrell wrote: On Thu, Dec 06, 2012 at 10:12:07AM +0000, d wrote: And its really not that hard to fit trains with some brushes and de-icing fluid to keep the 3rd rails clear Have you done any sums to figure out how much de-icing fluid would be needed? And have you ever tried clearing ice off your car's windows with just a brush? No, you need rather more than just a brush. If I was brushing it all night it wouldn't frost up in the first place. and if it really becomes a problem I can't see why they couldn't just cover the 3rd rails and use a US style slat contact instead of shoes. I suspect a lot cheaper than converting to overhead. So you want to modify all the trains, all the track, and all the lineside equipment that the modified trains will now bash into? Yeah, that'll be cheap. Why would anything need to be modified other than the pickups? Instead of a shoe sitting on the rail you have a slat poking out onto it. Nothing else apart from the 3rd rail cover would be needed and until they put that on then trains with old style shoes and trains with slats could interoperate. ITYF it'd be a damn site cheaper then erecting catenary throughout the southeast, adding transformers and pantographs to 3rd rail stock and binning the ones that can't be converted. And thats before the problem of bridge and tunnel clearances raises it ugly head. B2003 |
#29
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#30
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On 7 Dec, 13:49, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 12:19:45 on Fri, 7 Dec 2012, remarked: Have you done any sums to figure out how much de-icing fluid would be needed? *And have you ever tried clearing ice off your car's windows with just a brush? *No, you need rather more than just a brush. If I was brushing it all night it wouldn't frost up in the first place. Of course it would. The remaining moisture in the air would frost the window in between brush strokes (which are only any good at clearing snow, not frost and ice). Unless you are pouring de-icer continuously, and one of the drawbacks of de-icer is that the alcohols evaporate and make the glass even colder than ambient. IIRC, TfL's predecessors used to coat the conductor rail with some sort of grease during the cold season. The conductor did not ice over. Arcing was much reduced. |
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