The present invention concerns a rigid track bed of concrete, especially made of precast concrete modules, with a slab and continuous fastenings or a multiplicity of fastenings for rails mounted thereon for track guided vehicles.
DE 198 50 617 A1 discloses cross ties for a rigid run of track. Individual ties are aligned in rows, thus forming a base substrate for rails which are subsequently laid thereon. The individual ties are separated from each other at a predetermined distance and are predominately not rigidly tied together. In order to enable the best possible, disturbance-free travel of a rolling wheel of a track guided vehicle, the proposal is to place bearing elements upon the rails, which can be integrated into tie and concrete structure below. The said concrete understructure is further molded with retaining grooves, wherein a derailed wheel can run. The concrete ties possess, in turn, a specified spacing from one another, so that a rail-borne wheel rolls from one tie to another. The ties and the track fastenings, as well as the bearing elements, are all subject to damage thereby.
DE 199 31 048 A1 teaches the placement of a rail for track guided vehicles on a rail bearing slab. On the said slab are provided absorbent pads, which are affixed to the rail bearing slab by bolts. If derailment protection is required, then the absorption pads serve immediately to the affixing of the surface protection elements, on which the derailed wheel can roll. The said absorbent pads serve, in such a case, as a noise control and as a fastening element for derailment safety equipment.
The positional arrangement of the derailment protection rails along the track has been made known by DE 44 38 397 A1 or by DE 199 41 060 A1. In a similar manner to DE 199 31 048 A1 a derailment protection rail made of iron is mounted along the track, in order, that in case of a derailment of a vehicle, the derailed wheel can be safely captured.
The purpose of the present invention is to create a derailment protection, which safely guides a derailed wheel and thereby, to the greatest possible extent, the purpose includes avoidance of damage to the concrete slab of a rigid track bed.
This purpose is achieved by a rigid track bed with the features of claim 1.
A rigid track bed is made of concrete, especially of precast concrete components, and possesses a slab with fastenings mounted thereon to mount rails for track guided vehicles. Normally the slabs are about 6 meters long, whereby rail fastening units must be placed, separated from one another at distances of about 60 cm. On each slab, then, a multiplicity of rail fastenings are provided. In accord with the invention, to be found on the said slab, and parallel to the rail, is an upward directed, precast, curb. This curb serves for the protection of the slab, the rail and, in case of derailment, also the vehicle. The prefabricated concrete part so acts, that in the intervening space between the rail and itself, a derailed wheel of a track guided vehicle is captured and the vehicle or vehicles can be brought to a stillstand in a gradual manner. The curb which simultaneously runs along beside the rail exhibits no particularly large opening between its sections, in which the vehicle, i.e. the derailed wheel can be abruptly prevented from rolling to its stop. By means of the evenly guided run of the wheel, in this way damage of the rigid track bed slab and the curb is substantially avoided. Beyond this, the track guided vehicle is thereby prevented from leaving the rigid track bed, whereupon, under certain circumstances, an entire vehicle can overturn. Thereby, in that the curb is designed of precast concrete, the said curb is granted sufficient structural strength to retain the vehicle. The force load for such capture can reach some 10 metric tons per meter, which is resisted by a precast concrete part made in accord with modern technology.
Advantageously, the rail fastenings are placed at support points, especially on upward projections of the underlying slab of the rigid track bed. In this regard, there are specified fastening locations created for the rails, so that the rails can be laid in a very exact alignment. The bottom of the space between the rail and the longitudinal curb, in this invented design, can be raised somewhat higher, so that along this path, an even running height for the derailed wheel is created. By the said elevation, an abrupt drop of a wheel from one supporting tie and a lifting to a next tie is avoided. In addition to this advantage, an appropriate design of rail fastenings position avoids damage to said fastenings under a rolling derailed wheel. Since the curb is of precast design, the casting can be easily made to include this protective feature.
Particularly advantageous, since the manufacturing costs thereof are low, is to integrate the said raised curb into the slab. In this manner, with only one manufacturing step, both the slab and the curb can be made for protection during derailment. No further field mounting labor is necessary, and besides this, the structural strength of the curb is increased by this action, since a firm connection to the massive slab has been created. Derailment protection need not be made in the form of a separate, exchangeable component, since damage to curb and the rigid track bed, when made in the invented design for derailment protection, is only to be feared in very few cases. The integrated manufacture of the curb and the slab is thus of advantage.
It is particularly advantageous, if the curb is placed on that side of the rail proximal to the centerline of the track. The derailed wheel, which is diverted toward the center of the track, is then controlled. Additionally it is obvious, that an additional curb could be provided on the outside of the rail, so that derailed wheels on both sides of the vehicle could travel securely in a guided path between the rails and the said curbs.
Particularly advantageous and of an inventive nature is a situation wherein the continuity of the curb is intermittently provided with slots running transverse to the longitudinal axis of the slab. These slots can serve for the runoff of rain or melt water which collects on the slab.
It is a possibility, that the said slot can extend itself through the curb to a point within the slab, then, by this means, stress points of fissures are engendered within the slab. Inevitable cracks can branch out from such slots. However, giving consideration to condition of the slab, such cracking can be controlled. Accordingly, both the fissuring of the curb and of the slab can be specifically regulated. The slotted recesses are so formed, that the over-rolling of the derailed wheel is not particularly disturbed and the thus the curb is not damaged.
It is of particular advantage, if the slab itself exhibits additional fissure blocking slots, particularly when the slots of the curb find themselves proximal to the said fissure protection areas. In this way, a positive control on the general fissure growth is created. An uncontrolled continuance of branching fissures is reliably avoided by the presence of these slots.
It has proven itself as particularly advantageous, when the shape of the curb is such, that the upper edge of the curb is above the top surface of the rail, by perhaps about 20 mm. In this way a derailed wheel, which, because of the effective forces of the derailment hops along off the rail, is very reliably arrested by the curb. The derailed wheel is thus forced to roll between the rail and the curb until it is safely brought to a stillstand.
In order to maintain a sufficient spacing between the rail and the sidewall of the curb for the derailed wheel of the track guided vehicle, it is advantageous if the said space has a breadth of about 180 mm. Using this dimension, a customary running wheel of a track guided vehicle can be reliably confined, with no fear that the curb or the rail would be damaged, or that the wheel jumps out of the said separating space. Obviously, the effective separation can be otherwise dimensioned, if the track guided vehicle possesses wheels, which obviously are wider or narrower than customary. In any case, it is important, that the intervening distance is dimensioned to be sufficiently wide to accommodate the dimensions of a derailed wheel.
It is of particular advantage, if the curb is made of high strength concrete. With such strength available, the forces to be expected by a derailment, which work against the derailment safety structures, are containable by the concrete curb, without the expectation that the curb itself will be destroyed and that the vehicle, under certain circumstances, can divert itself from the rigid track bed. With high strength concrete, the curb will exhibit such a structural strength, that the generated derailment forces are contained.
Where an integrated curb is in use, it is advantageous if the curb is further consolidated with the slab by continuous, steel reinforcement rodding. In derailment incident, this supplementary strengthening will prevent the curb from being torn away from the rigid track bed.
Another method of holding to a high structural strength for the concrete curb, is the use of fiber reinforced concrete to enhance the derailment protection of the curb.
If an especially high strength concrete is necessary for derailment protection, then it is also possible, that metal structural members can be worked into the curb. Particularly, with an angle bar embedded in the concrete, the edges of the curb are protected. With this supplementary measure, an especially better derailment protection is brought about, even though, for normal usage, a concrete curb is entirely sufficient.
If curbs with metal structural members are employed, then it is to advantage, if the continuity of the said metal structural member is interrupted in proximity to the described slots. In such a case, assurance is given, that the inherent fissuring of the slab of the rigid track bed cannot bridge over and is thus made inactive.
Alternate to this, provision can be made, that metal structural members, particularly rods, are so installed that they can “prestress” the concrete body, whether slab or curb. If this is done, it becomes possible, that the slab of the rigid track bed can endure load fissuring, without the possibility that bifurcating cracking would extend itself to other than foreseen locations.
Advantageously, the curbs are so designed, that the fastenings for the rail are protected from damage. In this matter, it is of advantage, if the bottom of the intervening space between the curb and the rail, is of such a height, that the wheel rolls therein without contacting the rail fastenings. Such a solution is very easy to realize with premixed concrete curbs.
Further advantages of the present invention are described in the following embodiments in greater detail. There is shown in:
In
On the slab 1 is placed a curb 5. The curb 5 is best integrated with the said slab 1, and thus presents, along with the slab 1, a single precast concrete component. The curb 5 is made of high strength concrete or may be of fiber reinforced concrete, in order that the applied load in the case of derailment of a track guided vehicle may be contained without additional measures and the derailed wheel may continue a controlled rolling in an intervening space between rail 3 and curb 5. The curb 5 in the depicted embodiment is placed toward the centerline of the tracks. The second (not shown) rail of the said track can likewise be guarded by a second curb 5, again proximal to the track centerline. By this means, the motion of a derailment of the vehicle is reliably limited in both directions. Such structuring, however, is not required in every case.
The curb 5 possesses an upper edge 6, which is higher than an upper edge 7 of a rail 3. This difference in elevation provides assurance, that during a derailment, under certain circumstances a hopping, derailed wheel remains safely confined in the intervening space between the rail 3 and the curb 5. As a difference in the said elevations, a dimension of some 20 mm has shown itself to be sufficient. The width of the intervening space, between the head of the rail 3 and the inner wall of the curb 5, at least for common wheels of track guided vehicles, is measured at 180 mm, which is considered sufficient. In this case, the wheel is securely caught therein with directionally controlled roll, and remains so until it is brought to a stillstand.
The curb 5 possesses in this embodiment example, a metal structural member 15 on the upper edge, proximal to the rail 3. This metal structural member 15 serves as a protector of the said edge 7, in order to avoid a breaking off of the said upper edge of the curb 5 in a case of an abrupt impact of the wheel 13 thereagainst during a derailment. The curb 5 itself is the actual safety element against derailment damage.
The present invention is not limited to the described embodiment examples. Other formulations of the curb 5 and the rail fastenings 4 as well as the rail support points can be made at any time. For instance, the curb 5 can be designed exactly in the manner of a second curb (not shown) running parallel at the other side of the slab 1. This even allows a platform, which could be used for salvage and rescue crews. Beyond this, an addition parallel running curb can be laid on outside of each rail 3. In this way, an additional derailment safety measure is created. The cross-sectional shape of the curb 5 obviously, can be altered in molding from the shape here illustrated. Moreover, the curb 5 can be bolted to the slab 1, whereby this would involve a somewhat less stable design than the above described integrated precast construction of the same.
In regard to the fastening of the rails, it is possible that one continuous fastening arrangement of the rail can be made on the slab, instead of the fastening the rail at a multitude of positions thereon. A fastening structural member clamps the rail to a provided holding means on said slab.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 38 309.6 | Aug 2001 | DE | national |
101 38 624.9 | Aug 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP02/07601 | 7/9/2002 | WO |