It sounds like a question on a kid’s quiz show: “How do you stop a train?”
A) Hail it like a cab? B) Pull the emergency brake? C) Put wet leaves on the
track?
If you chose “C”, you were correct… and you must be a regular commuter on
Metro-North.
This is the time of year that tries train engineers’ souls and commuters’ patience. On a single day one recent fall, 60 rush-hour trains were delayed by “slippery rails” when wet leaves caused trains to “slip-slide” on their usually solid tracks.
You may not realize it, but the flanged wheel of a train contacts the rail only on a surface area the size of a dime. That’s why trains can move so smoothly with minimal power… riding a small, but firm area of friction.
But when the leaves fall and get wet, they are ground into one of the slipperiest substances known to man, a compound called pectin. As the train rolls along, its braking computer senses the slip and tries to apply the disc brakes, just like your cars ABS system.
But often the brakes are applied so hard that a locked wheel is ground against
the track, creating a flat spot on the usually round surface. In years past
these flat wheel
Sophisticated
train computers don’t like it when they think
the train can’t stop so, on the new M8 cars running, the railroad had to
reprogram the safety systems to reassure them the train wasn’t out of control
and didn’t need emergency braking.
Worse yet, on some lines the slippery leaves can virtually leave the trains
unable to move. Case in point, the Danbury branch line which is an almost
continual up-hill climb from Norwalk to “The Hat City”, 397 feet above sea
level. On this branch, diesel locomotive-pulled trains often can’t stop on
hills at stations like Cannondale, so on some days they skip such stops and make
a running start for the steeper climbs.
On an MU (multiple-unit electric) mainline train, all cars are locomotives,
spreading out the traction-power the full length of the train. But on a branch
line, a single Genesis locomotive weighing 120+ tons has only eight wheels
touching the track, seeking enough traction to pull a fully loaded eight car
train. That means eight dime-sized points of friction for a multi-ton load.
Sometimes the solution is as simple as sand dropped from special hoppers on the
train just in front of the drive-wheels. The resulting friction gets the train
going or helps it stop.
Mind you, this is a problem for railroads worldwide, not just here in the
northeast.
Of late, Metro-North has brought in heavier armament… a specially designed car
dubbed “Water World” equipped with high pressure hoses that blast the tracks
free of the gooey mess.
They’re also experimenting with chemical sprays. And one inventor in the UK is even proposing to zap the goo off the rails with lasers!
So in the fall as we appreciate the gorgeous foliage, remember the words of Paul Simon during your next ride on Metro-North: “Slip sliding away, slip sliding away. You know the nearer your destination, the more you’re slip sliding away.”
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