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Author Topic: Severn Tunnel - engineering improvements, events, incidents and history - merged posts  (Read 146008 times)
phile
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« Reply #90 on: October 25, 2016, 14:59:57 »

Is it the intention that the Y Cymro power car(s) will always form the 0728 from Swansea? Doesn't that make it rather restrictive for GWR (Great Western Railway)? They already have the challenge of keeping the green sets together. I'd have thought it must make the maintenance schedule something of a nightmare.

No.  It won't work it every day, it will cycle round like the rest.   The significance is in the name asnone of the other named ones work the trains every day.
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grahame
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« Reply #91 on: September 11, 2018, 15:36:39 »

From 25th December 2018 to 1st January 2019, all lines will be closed at Severn Tunnel Junction.

London and Thames Valley to South Wales passengers should take the train to Bristol Parkway for a bus transfer to Newport, from where trains will be running to Cardiff and Swansea (Carmarthen??).  A 'local' rail replacement bus service will be provided from Brsitol Parkway to Patchway, Severn Tunnel Junction and Newport. I am not aware of arrangements for Pilning passengers on 29th December.

Passengers from Bristol and south thereof should also travel to Bristol Parkway and transfer to the bus there.

Note - the route from Gloucster to Newport is also blocked by these works, so diversions of London / Reading to South Wales trains via Gloucster is not possible.

Services from London / Reading via Oxford and Worcester to Hereford will NOT be extended to Newport due to limited route knowledge and route capacity, and the much extended journey time that would ensue.

Above as told by GWR (Great Western Railway) major possessions team - a couple of elements may still be draft, but I am cleared to share. Please take this more as guildines that rules just for the moment.  Exact timetables online early November.
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grahame
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« Reply #92 on: April 14, 2019, 06:30:08 »

From GWR (Great Western Railway) Media Centre

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Quicker journeys promised as engineering work set to continue this Easter

Wednesday 10th April 2019
Rail engineering work continues this Easter as Network Rail carries out vital electrification works in the Severn Tunnel.

The work, which when complete will enable passengers to experience the full benefits of new Intercity Express Trains, will also see a new accessible footbridge provided at Patchway Station.

With the railway line closed to train services between Bristol Parkway and Newport, trains will run to an amended timetable from Good Friday, Friday 19, to Easter Monday, Monday 22 April, and bus replacement services provided where trains are unable to operate.

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trains between London Paddington and South Wales will terminate at Bristol Parkway and restart from Newport with replacement road transport in between

trains from Portsmouth Harbour to Cardiff Central will terminate at Bristol Parkway instead; trains from Taunton to Cardiff Central will terminate at Bristol Temple Meads

replacement buses and coaches will operate between Bristol Parkway and Newport, with some calling additionally at Patchway and Severn Tunnel Junction

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Further work is planned in the Severn tunnel on Saturday 27 and Sunday 28 April, when trains between London Paddington and South Wales will be diverted via an alternate route.

Replacement road transport will still operate between Bristol Parkway and Newport, with some buses calling additionally at Patchway and Severn Tunnel Junction
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« Reply #93 on: April 14, 2019, 07:19:15 »

The line to the West of England also closed at Castle Cary on Easter Sunday with trains leaving Paddington earlier than normal and going via Bristol.
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Adrian
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« Reply #94 on: April 14, 2019, 19:00:50 »

The Easter blockade includes Newport - Gloucester services too, but the 27th/28th is apparently just for the tunnel.  Does anyone know whether it is planned to energise the section from Bristol Parkway through the Severn Tunnel that weekend?
 
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SandTEngineer
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« Reply #95 on: April 22, 2019, 10:29:10 »

Photographs of the new Patchway footbridge being installed, down the page here: http://www.cornwallrailwaysociety.org.uk/latest-input--news--old-pictures-etc
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« Reply #96 on: June 28, 2019, 07:44:36 »

Tim Harris speaking about concerns for the electrification as regards to "the straps"

through  Severn Tunnel on Radio Bristol.

Listen again approx 07:35am in, on Friday 28 June 2019.
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johnneyw
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« Reply #97 on: June 28, 2019, 10:15:04 »

Just had a listen. Looks serious. The straps were expected to last 25 years and are now failing less than 4 years after installation. Salty, humid conditions (you don't say!) are blamed. The report said this could have a severe impact on electrification to Wales.

Edit:  IIRC ('if I recall/remember/read correctly') the straps referred to were "earthing straps".
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Oxonhutch
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« Reply #98 on: June 28, 2019, 13:09:37 »

Could you please post a link?  Thanks.
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johnneyw
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« Reply #99 on: June 28, 2019, 13:40:17 »

It's quickly available on the news at the top of the hour on BBC» (British Broadcasting Corporation - home page) Radio Bristol through the iPlayer. It's been on all the bulletins this morning. Not sure about a precise link.
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grahame
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« Reply #100 on: June 28, 2019, 13:46:44 »

Could you please post a link?  Thanks.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p07c22hk

1 hour 35 minutes and a few seconds in.

Earthing straps intended for 25 years but decaying after 4.  Expert suggests that a compromise solution is available in running the trains on diesel for 6 or 7 km.  "You would not notice" switch from electric to diesel, and you'll still get electric trains in Cardiff.   However, it's said that Network Rail are also looking for alternatives.
« Last Edit: June 28, 2019, 13:51:46 by grahame » Logged

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« Reply #101 on: June 28, 2019, 14:08:54 »

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-48621944
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« Reply #102 on: June 28, 2019, 18:38:49 »

Some of this is a bit garbled, isn't it? For example, from Railnews:
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However. it has emerged that recently-installed earthing straps connected to the overhead conductor rails inside the tunnel are already breaking down. Network Rail had estimated that they would be all right for 25 years.

Well, if the overhead conductor rail really is earthed, there won't be any electric running anyway!

I guess the issue is earthing straps (or bonding) of all the steel supports bolted to the roof. All OLE (Overhead Line Equipment, more often "OHLE") has to have its steel structures securely earthed, using its own piles and wires alongside the track joining all the bits together, plus bonding to the rails as well. However, these roof supports are extra bits, and there are a lot of them - at a maximum of 12 m apart x 12 km that's a thousand or more, so replacing that many would be a big job. Obviously the same goes for replacing the supports, which as they look like galvanised mild steel may also degrade quite fast.

The BBC» (British Broadcasting Corporation - home page) words refer to two quite different issues:
Quote
Earth straps - a safety feature on the overhead connectors holding up the power line - were corroding in the salt water environment within months when they are supposed to have a 25-year lifespan, meaning the line through the tunnel could not be electrified safely.
Media captionInside the four-mile-long underwater Severn Tunnel

It means the electrification system within the brickwork tunnel - the longest underwater tunnel in the world for more than 100 years after it opened in 1886 - struggles to maintain voltage and regularly trips.

Network Rail contracted experts from Swiss company Furrer and Frey, specialists in developing power cables inside tunnels, to design a solution but none have so far worked in the salty climate.

If the material of the straps corrodes, the first thing I'd expect to see is they fail a visual inspection. That would make it unsafe to energise, but wouldn't make it trip. Now, I'd guess the damp makes the insulators disinclined to insulate, and too high a leakage might cause the power to trip. But for slightly dodgy earthing to make that worse needs something extra to be involved.

I did wonder, when this was first mentioned some time last year, if Furrer + Frey might know a lot about tunnels through Alps, but still be short of experience of undersea ones (due to the lack of sea in Switzerland).

If all the right information is given to the right people (metallurgists, for example) you'd think that should produce an answer to the problem. Put that way, there is an implication that what was installed wasn't chosen by such a process - perhaps by picking the standard item most likely to cope.
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« Reply #103 on: June 29, 2019, 12:58:23 »

The wrong kind of humidity.
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« Reply #104 on: June 29, 2019, 19:33:00 »

The OLE (Overhead Line Equipment, more often "OHLE") structures in the tunnel will be galvanised steel, the hard drawn copper alloy contact wire is in an aluminium "conductor beam" this is supported from the structures by polymeric insulators.  All of the OLE structures will have a multi strand aluminium between them as a bonding conductor (in layman's terms and earth wire), the aluminium bonding conductor will be fastened to the structures by a stainless steel clamp.

It is quite likely that there has been a higher level of electrolytic action between the dissimilar metals, zinc, stainless steel, aluminium than expected causing the damage.  Its possible not helped by the fact that the contact system has been bonded out for the last 4 years allowing circulating currents caused by the electrolysis to flow.

I have visited many tunnels in my railway career including Seven Tunnel a number of times, whilst all Victorian tunnels are damp and dank places Seven Tunnel in in a league of its own in regards dampness
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