Virgin with a problem?
Posted
#210145
(In Topic #11490)

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Proper Preparation makes for Perfect Performance!!
http://yourmodelrailway.net/view_topic.php?id=13331&forum_id=21
http://yourmodelrailway.net/view_topic.php?id=13331&forum_id=21
Posted

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Seriously, may be a flat spot on a 'rim', there must be someone here with some teknikkle nollidge…
Doug
'You may share the labours of the great, but you will not share the spoil…' Aesop's Fables
"Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy" - Benjamin Franklin
In the land of the slap-dash and implausible, mediocrity is king
"Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy" - Benjamin Franklin
In the land of the slap-dash and implausible, mediocrity is king
Posted

Site staff

(Made me think of F1)
Ed
PS Interesting thread title Ron :shock:



Posted

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I've heard they occasionally leave the track but I thought it was a different type of track ………………….and a different meaning for "leaves" …….:cheers……………………………………..
(Made me think of F1)
Ed
PS Interesting thread title Ron :shock:
'Petermac
Posted

Legacy Member
:thumbs;-):cool:
OWEN
web-cam 2.2.74.174:8081
if the lights are off no cam
if the lights are off no cam
Posted

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'Petermac
Posted
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John.
Posted

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Cheers MIKE
I'm like my avatar - a local ruin!
I'm like my avatar - a local ruin!
Posted
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Sometimes I hear a cavitation noise when one of the kids has a rear window in the car open partway on the expressway.
Thats outside the box.
Andrew
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Sorry for the hijack Ron - now back to Virgin Trains and their flat tyre ………………….:thumbs
'Petermac
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Posted

Site staff

it's all Abellio Greater Anglia around here.
Last edit: by Ed
Posted

Full Member
'You may share the labours of the great, but you will not share the spoil…' Aesop's Fables
"Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy" - Benjamin Franklin
In the land of the slap-dash and implausible, mediocrity is king
"Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy" - Benjamin Franklin
In the land of the slap-dash and implausible, mediocrity is king
Posted
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Posted

Inactive Member
Posted

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Obligatory crude joke over here's the teck-nickel stuff.
That's an HST set. They cruise at up to 125mph in fixed formation sets. What you can hear is a tiny flat spot - which might be a millimetre or less in width - on one wheel tyre rotating very fast and hammering the track with each revolution.
In an ideal world tyres are perfectly round. They start out that way when fitted to the wheels. Ignoring the minuscule and momentary flattening effect as the wheel contacts the rail (though that is necessary for traction purposes and without it the train would never move at all) it only takes one fractional moment of slip or brake-lock to create a flat spot.
The problem might be caused by unequal braking forces or slow release of brakes from the affected wheel set or by a momentary loss of traction through slipping on any low-friction substance on the railhead such as a leaf, insects, oil or even water.
It typically does not affect more than one or two wheel sets on a train unless the whole train has skidded along the rails which is an extremely rare event. On fixed-formation sets it isn't easy to remove one vehicle while keeping the rest in traffic then arranging for the casualty to be tyre-turned on a wheel lathe. But that is what is required.
In most cases minor flats will be left until the set is next rostered a classified examination at a depot where it can be dealt with. Minor wheel flats are remarkably common on HST sets for this reason.
The hammer-blow does create extra unwanted stresses to both track and train but on the modern railway the logistics of dealing with these things immediately usually don't stack up favourably and they are left for days and sometimes weeks. It's not considered a safety risk.
Major wheel flats where there is a huge clunk every time the wheel rotates and which can actually be felt by passengers travelling aboard a vehicle so affected require its immediate removal from service for ultrasonic checking and attention on the wheel lathe - very severe cases will require a complete wheel-set change.
Last edit: by Gwiwer
Posted

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Posted

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Selling point for the noise sensitive is that with leaves on all through the year the noise level will be constant, not just quiet in summer and noisy after leaf fall. Just forget to mention that it'll be a few years for the new trees to grow enough to reduce noise level
Cheers MIKE
I'm like my avatar - a local ruin!
I'm like my avatar - a local ruin!
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