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Boom gates fail in Melbourne, limiting train services

You are here: Home > Forum > Miscellaneous > The real thing (anything else rail-oriented) > Boom gates fail in Melbourne, limiting train services

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Boom gates fail in Melbourne, limiting train services 27/08/2014 at 03:56 #64160
maxand
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1637 posts
Quote:
Malfunctioning boom gates have been swinging open as trains approach at level crossings on the Stony Point line south of Melbourne, forcing Metro to pull trains out of service and put passengers on buses to avoid the risk of a crash.

Metro has issued a safety alert to staff warning them of the boom gate failures and has banned single-car trains from running on the line until further notice. It has also blamed train drivers for sprinkling too much sand onto the tracks from the train's "sander".

Train drivers have reported three cases where boom gates have dangerously swung open this year, Metro says. All three happened while the train was stopped at a station platform and no train passed through a crossing with raised booms.

On Sunday Metro cancelled three Stony Point trains per day until further notice, because its ban on single-car trains means it no longer has enough trains to meet the timetable. The trains will be replaced with buses.

Metro operates the Stony Point line using diesel Sprinter trains provided by V/Line.

The line, between Frankston and Stony Point on the Mornington Peninsula, is by far the quietest line in Metro's network, with just seven passenger trains a day. Freight trains also use the line to go to and from the Port of Hastings.

Metro has laid part of the blame for the problem on its drivers, accusing some of them of being too quick to use the train's sander, an instrument that provides more adhesion on the rails.
Full article here.

Anyone explain the connection between sand and faulty gates?

Last edited: 27/08/2014 at 03:57 by maxand
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Boom gates fail in Melbourne, limiting train services 27/08/2014 at 05:10 #64161
Hawk777
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386 posts
If I had to take a wild guess: the level crossing gates are controlled by track circuits rather than treadles, and sand is not electrically conductive resulting in failure to shunt the circuit? This would also explain why multi-car trains were not banned: much of the sand would likely have been brushed off the track by the time the later cars’ wheels arrived, letting them shunt the TCs effectively.
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Boom gates fail in Melbourne, limiting train services 27/08/2014 at 06:10 #64162
kaiwhara
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587 posts
" said:
If I had to take a wild guess: the level crossing gates are controlled by track circuits rather than treadles, and sand is not electrically conductive resulting in failure to shunt the circuit? This would also explain why multi-car trains were not banned: much of the sand would likely have been brushed off the track by the time the later cars’ wheels arrived, letting them shunt the TCs effectively.
Correct. The Sprinter units over there are single car units, and some Stoney Point services are indeed operated by a single unit. Sanding is an issue if it is overused as it can cause a loss of electrical conductivity on a short train through the axle, therefore not causing the Track Circuit to appropriately drop in the presence of a Train.

In New Zealand, the Standard Railcars which ran from the 30's to 70's were also well known for this.

Sorry guys, I am in the business of making people wait!
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Boom gates fail in Melbourne, limiting train services 27/08/2014 at 07:20 #64163
clive
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2789 posts
" said:
If I had to take a wild guess: the level crossing gates are controlled by track circuits rather than treadles, and sand is not electrically conductive resulting in failure to shunt the circuit? This would also explain why multi-car trains were not banned: much of the sand would likely have been brushed off the track by the time the later cars’ wheels arrived, letting them shunt the TCs effectively.
This is why automatic crossings in the UK always have two separate triggers, usually a track circuit and a treadle. If I recall correctly, the sample designs in the Green Book simply have the treadle short the track circuit.

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Boom gates fail in Melbourne, limiting train services 27/08/2014 at 08:35 #64165
maxand
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Thanks guys for explaining this.
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