Should transport infrastructure be more weather resistant ?
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- RenewableCandy
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I think weather infrastructure should be more transport-resistant...
The pothole thing's interesting. I don't know if you know this vt but the UK has recently (again) upped the limit for truck weight on our roads. When I were a lass this was 34 Tonnes. It's now 48 or something, having gone up in chunks of 2 tonnes every few years when nobody's been looking. Needless to say, neither our road surfaces nor the often-mediaeval layout of our cities has adapted to keep up.
The pothole thing's interesting. I don't know if you know this vt but the UK has recently (again) upped the limit for truck weight on our roads. When I were a lass this was 34 Tonnes. It's now 48 or something, having gone up in chunks of 2 tonnes every few years when nobody's been looking. Needless to say, neither our road surfaces nor the often-mediaeval layout of our cities has adapted to keep up.
- biffvernon
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Thime the middle ages caught up.neither our road surfaces nor the often-mediaeval layout of our cities has adapted to keep up.
Round here the roads were built narrower, single carriageway (when we had proper carriages). The roads had a couple of thousand years worth of foundations, settlement and more building. Then a few decades ago the roads were widened, which was convenient in the face of on-coming traffic but it meant that the new yard or so on either side of the road had very little strength. Now with the heavy lorries the roads develop longitudinal cracks a yard from the edge with the outer parts of the road heading down and outwards towards the nearest ditch or dyke.
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RenewableCandy wrote:I think weather infrastructure should be more transport-resistant...
The pothole thing's interesting. I don't know if you know this vt but the UK has recently (again) upped the limit for truck weight on our roads. When I were a lass this was 34 Tonnes. It's now 48 or something, having gone up in chunks of 2 tonnes every few years when nobody's been looking. Needless to say, neither our road surfaces nor the often-mediaeval layout of our cities has adapted to keep up.
It is much the same here. Roads designed and built by horse drawn wagon got a leveling course of a few inches of gravel then chip sealed with cutback asphalt or even coal tar back in the twenties then they got widened on the cheap in the post war late forties and fifties then suffered benign neglect while the inter state highways were being built. Now the weight limits are soaring to appease the trucking lobbyist and fuel taxes are being diverted to wet lands, bike paths and corn ethanol. On the plus side I will never run out of work that really, really!! needs doing.
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The "often mediaeval layout of our cities" has enough trouble keeping up with the humble motor car, let alone 48-ton trucks!RenewableCandy wrote:I think weather infrastructure should be more transport-resistant...
The pothole thing's interesting. I don't know if you know this vt but the UK has recently (again) upped the limit for truck weight on our roads. When I were a lass this was 34 Tonnes. It's now 48 or something, having gone up in chunks of 2 tonnes every few years when nobody's been looking. Needless to say, neither our road surfaces nor the often-mediaeval layout of our cities has adapted to keep up.
(Another thing those Yanks have probably not directly experienced).
- emordnilap
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Feckin' jaysus. Mad. We've nearly got the same over here - 46 tonnes - where the roads are far worse to start with.RenewableCandy wrote:the UK has recently (again) upped the limit for truck weight on our roads. When I were a lass this was 34 Tonnes. It's now 48 or something, having gone up in chunks of 2 tonnes every few years when nobody's been looking.
Add in the 'competition', where three or more separate parcels vans travel the same roads the postperson does, or refuse trucks - same again, where there used to be one. Then there's farm vehicles, which can be simply huge.
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- biffvernon
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There's more to weight than one might suspect: width of tyres, axle spacing, suspension whether one is travelling to of from a railhead and much more...
http://www.transportsfriend.org/road/axles.html
44 tonnes is the maximum and that comes with a whole lot of extra condition.
But it does make you wonder why there is so much stuff in the wrong place.
http://www.transportsfriend.org/road/axles.html
44 tonnes is the maximum and that comes with a whole lot of extra condition.
But it does make you wonder why there is so much stuff in the wrong place.
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- adam2
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The recent and ongoing severe weather certainly shows the need to make transport infrastructure more weather resistant.
Allmost no trains are running in the far Southwest at present due to extreme weather.
Part of the sea wall and station at Dawlish has been washed into the sea, the damage looks very extensive.
This stretch of line is allways somwhat vulnerable, and building of an inland alternative route is periodicly disscussed.
Numerous other bits of the rail network are damaged.
Allmost no trains are running in the far Southwest at present due to extreme weather.
Part of the sea wall and station at Dawlish has been washed into the sea, the damage looks very extensive.
This stretch of line is allways somwhat vulnerable, and building of an inland alternative route is periodicly disscussed.
Numerous other bits of the rail network are damaged.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
Talk this afternoon is of a six-week fix. I'll be impressed if it's done that soon - it seems like a whole new section of sea wall needs to be designed and built, with ongoing bad weather before they can even think about relaying the track...adam2 wrote:Part of the sea wall and station at Dawlish has been washed into the sea, the damage looks very extensive.
In the long term, this line is untenable. We can expect another couple feet of sea level rise in the coming decades.
- biffvernon
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As far as I can make out the "six weeks" originated in a BBC TV interview of a Network Rail bloke who in an interviewed on site was asked how long the job would take, looked at the mess, sucked in through his teeth and said "About six weeks, luv." or something to that effect.
Those who think extreme weather events may become more frequent in the lifetime of a railway might like to consider alternative routes. We can hardly blame Mr Brunel for failing to take global warming into account, but now...
I guess that the frequency of 10 metre waves may be more critical than the expected sea level rise in the next few decades.
Dawlish Station was opened in 1846 so it is 168 years old. Any guesses as to where sea level and storm intensity will be in another 167 years?
Those who think extreme weather events may become more frequent in the lifetime of a railway might like to consider alternative routes. We can hardly blame Mr Brunel for failing to take global warming into account, but now...
I guess that the frequency of 10 metre waves may be more critical than the expected sea level rise in the next few decades.
Dawlish Station was opened in 1846 so it is 168 years old. Any guesses as to where sea level and storm intensity will be in another 167 years?
- biffvernon
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Time to reopen the Teign Valley Line
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teign_Valley_Line
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teign_Valley_Line
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There must be quite a bit of preliminary engineering work and marshaling of materials that can be done now for a spring start. Of course what you consider winter conditions wouldn't phase a contractor here one bit unless the work was to be conducted in the sea itself.cubes wrote:It seems a bit pointless trying to fix the line until the spring anyway, or at least until the weather improves.
- emordnilap
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