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Old December 1st 03, 05:11 PM posted to uk.transport.london
Richard J. Richard J. is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Jul 2003
Posts: 1,429
Default London Underground track

JDikseun wrote:
(Smokeyone) wrote in message
. com...
First of all, I may be mistaken but I am reasonably sure that at one
station I saw a section of track with four of the spring clips
missing
in a row from the shoes on the rail. I think shoes is the correct
name. Is this now the norm on the Underground...........

Smokeyone


Four missing keys in a row is not unsafe, and there's no danger of
derailment. Track has plenty of designed-in and built-in redundancy
for obvious safety reasons. That's why a few missing keys is no cause
for alarm. The same for coach screws (which hold the chairs fixed on
the sleepers), which is the one that gets ES reporters hysterical.
There's very high dynamic loading on rails, and keys continually get
dislodged or broken.


Even in a platform mostly used for terminating trains at very low speeds?

I had a good look at the site this afternoon (Platform 3 at Edgware Road
Circle Line, as identified by Smokeyone in another post). It was only
possible (as it was dark) to inspect the rail nearest the platform, but
that had a total of 15 missing keys. In the middle of the platform was
this sequence, where o = missing key and K = key present:

o K o K o o o K o K K o K K K K K o o o K K K o

Note that the first 12 chairs in this sequence had 7 missing keys!

The tracks are patrolled every 48 hours, the patrolman will replace
them on his next round. Patrolmen replace keys routinely, sometimes
none, sometimes 20 or 30 in one shift, usually 5-10.


One problem here may be that trains are stabled in the platform overnight.

If there's more than 5 in a row missing, we'd be very grateful if
you'd inform the station staff, because then it could become
unsafe.......


There weren't more than 3 in a row, but I thought 7 missing in 12 was
worrying, so I found the station supervisor and told him. He said he
thought that one train was stabled overnight alternately in platforms 2 and
3. It occurs to me that if the track is patrolled on the same days every
week, e.g. Tue, Thu, Sat, it could be that there is always a train on
Platform 3 at the time. (Platform 2 had only one missing key on the rail
nearest the platform.)

Smokeyone said he saw 4 in a row, but I assume he actually miscounted part
of the above sequence.

It will be interesting to see how long it takes LU/Metronet to fix it!
--
Richard J.
(to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address)