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Railway turntable

In rail terminology, a railway turntable or wheelhouse is a device for turning railway rolling stock, usually locomotives, so that they can be moved back in the direction from which they came.[1] Naturally, it is especially used in areas where economic considerations or a lack of sufficient space have served to weigh against the construction of a turnaround wye. In the case of steam locomotives, railways needed a way to turn the locomotives around for return trips as their controls were often not configured for extended periods of running in reverse and in many locomotives the top speed was lower in reverse motion. In the case of diesel locomotives, though most can be operated in either direction, they are treated as having "front ends" and "rear ends" (often determined by reference to the location of the crew cab). When a diesel locomotive is operated as a single unit, the railway company often prefers, or requires, that it be run "front end" first. When operated as part of a multiple unit locomotive consist, the locomotives can be arranged so that the consist can be operated "front end first" no matter which direction the consist is pointed. Turntables were also used to turn observation cars so that their windowed lounge ends faced toward the rear of the train.[2]

Wagon turntable at the National Slate Museum in Wales on 2 ft (610 mm) gauge track
A turntable at the John Street Roundhouse, now part of Roundhouse Park in Toronto, Canada, viewed from the CN Tower in September 2012.
Trench railway turntable.

History

 
A turntable for the Central Railroad of New Jersey, 1961
 

Early wagonways were industrial railways for transporting goods—initially bulky and heavy items, particularly mined stone, ores and coal—from one point to another, most often to a dockside to be loaded onto ships.[3] These early wagonways used a single point-to-point track, and when operators had to move a truck to another wagonway, they did so by hand. The lack of switching technology seriously limited the weight of any loaded wagon combination.[4]

The first railway switches were in fact wagon turnplates or sliding rails. Turnplates were initially made of two or four pieces of wood, circular in form, that replicated the track running through them. Their diameter matched that of the wagons used on any given wagonway, and they swung around a central pivot. Loaded wagons could be moved onto the turnplate, and rotating the turnplate 90 degrees allowed the loaded wagon to be moved to another piece of wagonway. Thus, wagon weight was limited only by the strength of the wood used in the turnplates or sliding rails. When iron and later steel replaced stone and wood, weight capacity rose again.[3]

However, the problems with turnplates and sliding rails were twofold. First, they were relatively small (often no more than 1 yard (0.91 m) in length), which limited the wagon length that could be turned. Second, their switching capacity could only be accessed when the wagon was on top of them and still, which limited the total capacity of any wagonway. The railway switch, which overcame both of these problems, was patented by Charles Fox in 1832.

As steam locomotives replaced horses as the preferred means of power, they became optimised to run in only one direction for operational ease and to provide some weather protection.[3] The resulting need to turn heavy locomotives required an engineering upgrade to the existing turnplate technology. Like earlier turnplates, most new turntables consisted of a circular pit in which a steel bridge rotated. The bridge was typically supported and balanced by the central pivot, to reduce the total load on the pivot and to allow easy turning. This was most often achieved by a steel rail running around the floor of the pit that supported the ends of the bridge when a locomotive entered or exited. The turntables had a positive locking mechanism to prevent undesired rotation and to align the bridge rails with the exit track. Rotation of the bridge could be accomplished manually (either by brute force or with a windlass system), popularly called an "Armstrong" turntable,[5][6] by an external power source, or by the braking system of the locomotive itself, though this required a locomotive to be on the table for it to be rotated.

The turntable bridge (the part of the turntable that included the tracks and that swivelled to turn the equipment) could span from 6 to 120 feet (1.8 to 36.6 m), depending on the railway's needs. Larger turntables were installed in maintenance facilities for longer locomotives, while short line and narrow gauge railways typically used smaller turntables. Turntables as small as 6 feet (1.83 m) in diameter have been installed in some industrial facilities where pieces of equipment are small enough to be pushed one at a time by humans or horsepower.

Roundhouse

 
A small turntable at the Orange Empire Railway Museum in Perris, CA. This type of turntable with the central tower and supporting cables is called a “gallows turntable”
 
A larger turntable in front of a roundhouse, 1909

In engine maintenance facilities, a turntable was usually surrounded, in part or in whole, by a roundhouse. It was more common for the roundhouse to only cover a portion of the land around a turntable but fully circular roundhouses exist, such as these preserved roundhouses:

By country

Function of a railway turntable on Upsala-Lenna Jernväg in Sweden

Great Britain

In Britain, where steam hauled trains generally have vacuum operated brakes, it was quite common for turntables to be operated by vacuum motors worked from the locomotive's vacuum ejector or pump via a flexible hose or pipe, although a few manually and electrically operated examples exist. The major manufacturers were Ransomes and Rapier, Ipswich and Cowans Sheldon, Carlisle. The GWR was the railway company that built several tables for its own use; there is little evidence any other companies did so.

Hungary

Miskolc Tiszai railway station retains an active turntable as of December 2021.[7]

India

There was a turntable at the Talaguppa end of the Shimoga-Talaguppa railway,[8] and one at Howbagh Railway Station near Jabalpur on the Balaghat-Jabalpur Narrow Gauge Line.[9] Both were used to turn the railbuses serving on these lines. After railbuses were replaced by MEMUs, turntables were dismantled.

In 2012, Mumbai Metro One, the BOT operator of the Mumbai Metro Line 1, announced that it had procured turntables to be used on the Rapid Transit system.[10]

Israel

The Israel Railway Museum, Haifa, has a turntable which was made by Metropolitan Carriage, Wagon & Finance Company, Old Park Works, Wednesbury. It was found buried in the grounds of the Israel Defense Forces History Museum, which is on the site of the old Jaffa railway station yard.

Romania

Like most ex-socialist countries of Eastern Europe, Romania still has several turntables in operational use. One can even see twin turntables, each with their own 180 degree roundhouse, like for one example at Timisoara.[11]

Sri Lanka

In Sri Lanka, most turntables which were used in the steam area have been abandoned. Most were situated at the major railway yards like Kandy, Galle, Nanu Oya, Anuradhapura, Maho, Galoya, Trincomalee, Batticaloa, Polgahawela Jnc, Badulla, Puttulam, and Bandarawela and depots in Dematagoda 2no. and Maradana. All turntables in Sri Lanka Railways were operated manually. They were used to turn some rolling stock and non-dual cab locomotives. Most turntables were later scrapped, though some have been preserved in museums.

USA

Due to the asymmetric design of many locomotives, turntables still in use are more common in North America than in Europe, where locomotive design favors configurations with a controller cabin on both ends or in the middle. In San Francisco, USA, the Powell cable car line uses turntables at the end of the routes, since the cable cars have operating controls at only one end of the car. The Long Island Rail Road still has a turntable and roundhouse at the Richmond Hills yard.

Surviving turntables

 
A4 Pacific No.9 "Union of South Africa" on the Ferryhill turntable, May 2019
 
A small turntable at the Textilmuseum Bocholt
 
Drivers turning cable car on a turntable at San Francisco
 
Turntable on the Sabah State Railway at Papar Station (Sabah, Malaysia)

Several working examples remain, many on heritage railways in Great Britain, and also in the United States. Some examples include:

The following are in storage, awaiting installation at UK sites:

  • Barry Rly. – 65’ outer race. Dismantled (ex Bricklayers Arms 1970s; moved from Mid Hants Rly.)
  • North Norfolk Rly., Dismantled; to be installed at Holt 2017. Ex South Devon Rly. - (ex Hull Botanic Gardens in 2005; built 1955, 60 ft)
  • Midland Railway Centre – Swanwick Jnc. – Dismantled - Hand powered, Balanced 60’, (ex Chinley).
  • Severn Valley Rly. - Dismantled (ex Bristol Bath Road) Stored at Eardington. Intention is to install at Bridgnorth. 65’ 3’’ Ransom Rapier built 1957[12]
  • East Lancs Rly. – Dismantled (ex Germany) – stored at Buckley Wells
  • Dean Forest Rly. - Dismantled (ex Calais Shed, SNCF, ex MLST Loughborough.)
  • Mid Norfolk Rly. – 60’ Dismantled R&R 1933 (ex Hitchin LNER ; ex Quainton, never installed there) to be installed at Dereham.
  • WCRC; stored Dismantled at Carnforth ; was proposed for Weymouth; ex Tyseley Locomotive Works Ltd.(onetime proposal to install at Stratford upon Avon) - ex Thornaby
  • Swanage Rly. Furzebrook ex Old Oak Common Depot 2011 - BR (WR) 70’ /125T ?E CS 9709/53 in use at Old Oak Common until 2008, used for HST power car turning etc.
  • Mallaig, Network Rail – Dismantled, scheme to install the ex Whitchurch table which is stored at Corpach or Fort William.
  • Stainmore Rly.Co., Kirkby Stephen East; 50’ or? 65’, outer race, hand powered. Ex Darlington station. Moved 1/2017.

New build turntable. Hitachi Rail Europe's rolling stock plant at Newton Aycliffe in County Durham has an 80 tonne locomotive turntable and a bogie test turntable; supplied by Lloyds British Somers Group in 2016.

The former Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific (Milwaukee Road) in Janesville, Wisconsin. Used now by the regional Wisconsin & Southern

Accidents

In the United States, when deciding liability for turntable accidents, most state courts followed the precedent set by the United States Supreme Court in Sioux City & Pacific R.R. v. Stout (1873).[13] In that case, a six-year-old child was playing on the unguarded, unfenced turntable when his friends began turning it. While attempting to get off, his foot became stuck and was crushed. The Court held that although the railroad was not bound by the same duty of care to strangers as it was to its passengers, it would be liable for negligence "if from the evidence given it might justly be inferred by the jury that the defendant, in the construction, location, management, or condition of its machine has omitted that care and attention to prevent the occurrence of accidents which prudent and careful men ordinarily bestow."[14]

In the case of Chicago B. & Q.R. Co. v. Krayenbuhl (1902), a four-year-old child was playing on an unlocked, unguarded railroad turntable. Other children set the turntable in motion, and it severed the ankle of the young child. The child's family sued the railroad company on a theory of negligence and won at trial. The Nebraska Supreme Court held that the railroad company may have been liable for negligence after considering the "character and location of the premises, the purpose for which they are used, the probability of injury therefrom, the precautions necessary to prevent such injury, and the relations such precautions bear to the beneficial use of the premises." However, the Supreme Court reversed the trial court's decision based on an improper jury instruction as to the evidence.[15]

Accidents to locomotives sometimes occurred. For example, if the turntable was incorrectly set and a locomotive was accidentally started or failed to stop, it might fall into the turntable pit.[16][17]

On rare occasions, a turntable would spin too fast during high winds, as happened at Garsdale (Settle–Carlisle line) in the UK c.1900. At this very exposed location, this was resolved by surrounding the turntable with a wooden stockade made from old sleepers. [18][specify]

Unusual turntables

 
A heavy German goods locomotive on the turntable at the German Steam Locomotive Museum, Bavaria. The pivot of this turntable is off-center, which prevents the turntable from rotating a full 360 degrees.
 
Twin-gauge straight + curved turntable at Petit Train à Vapeur de Forest, Brussels
  • The roundhouse in Montluçon, France, was equipped with a separate turntable and sector plate, which is a table pivoted at one end, in this case at the edge of the turntable. The sector plate served the side of the roundhouse that housed autorails with less requirement for turning. Both the turntable and sector plate were served by separate connections to the roundhouse. If turning was required the two could be connected together. The resulting roundhouse was not completely circular. Part of the roundhouse with the turntable is still extant.[19][20] A similar, operational sector plate is located in Bavaria at the German Steam Locomotive Museum.
  • Due to a lack of space at Ventnor railway station, a small turntable was provided to allow steam engines to run around their trains. Other stations with this arrangement included Bembridge, Withernsea and Harcourt Street.
  • The last remaining operational triple-gauge turntable in the world, used to station trains into the 23 bay roundhouse, exists at the Steamtown Heritage Centre in Peterborough, South Australia.[21]
  • A turntable exists on the Midland Line, New Zealand at Arthurs Pass in New Zealand. Steam engines on excursions cannot enter the Otira tunnel so must be turned around for the return

Multiple turntables

Stations housing large numbers of engines may have more than one turntable:

See also

  • List of railway roundhouses, most or all of which include a turntable
  • Wye – a way of turning whole trains.
  • Transfer table (UK: 'traverser') – provides access to two or more parallel tracks in a space saving manner like a turntable, but without the ability to turn.
  • A Sector plate or sector table is a traverser that rotates around a pivot that is not at the centre and therefore cannot rotate through 360˚.
  • Nowadays control cars, or coaches with controls at one end, have largely eliminated the need for turntables.
  • Singapore and Hong Kong have a combined traverser-turntable that takes 4-car sets.

References

  1. ^ . Macton.com. Archived from the original on 2017-04-22. Retrieved 2014-10-20.
  2. ^ The Elements of Railroad Engineering, 5th Edition, 1937, William G. Raymond. Published by John Wiley and Sons, New York
  3. ^ a b c Alun John Richards (16 March 2011). The Rails and Sails of Welsh Slate. Llygad Gwalch Cyf. ISBN 978-1845241742.
  4. ^ David Oldroyd (13 Nov 2007). Estates, Enterprise and Investment at the Dawn of the Industrial Revolution. Ashgate. ISBN 978-0754634553.
  5. ^ McGuirk, Marty (2002). The Model Railroader's Guide to Locomotive Servicing Terminals (1st ed.). Waukesha, WI: Kalmbach Books. p. 41. ISBN 0-89024-414-6 – via Google Books. A lever was installed at both ends of the bridge and the table was moved by hand, a method popularly called "Armstrong."
  6. ^ "Turntable". American-Rails.com. Retrieved January 31, 2021.
  7. ^ https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=19/48.09409/20.79971 Openstreetmap, retrieved 2021-12-11
  8. ^ . Irfca.org. Archived from the original on 2007-12-20. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  9. ^ "Blog entry on IRI".
  10. ^ Aklekar, Rajendra (16 July 2012). "Metro retro: Forgotten turn-tables back on track". Mumbai. Daily News and Analysis. Retrieved 2012-07-22.
  11. ^ https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=18/45.75201/21.20205 Openstreetmap, retrieved 2021-12-11
  12. ^ Severn Valley Railway News, Issue 126
  13. ^ Epstein, Richard A. (2008). Cases and Materials on Torts (9th ed.). United States of America: Aspen Publishers. p. 589. ISBN 978-0-7355-6923-2.
  14. ^ Sioux City & Pacific R.R. v. Stout, 84 U.S. 657,661 (1873)
  15. ^ Chicago, B & Q.R. Co. v. Krayenbuhl, 65 Neb. 889, 91 N.W. 880, (Neb., 1902)"
  16. ^ "RailPictures.Net Photo: LN 1250 Louisville & Nashville Steam 2-8-0 at Pensacola, Florida by Collection of Ron Flanary". www.railpictures.net. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  17. ^ "RailPictures.Net Photo: CSXT 806 CSX Transportation (CSXT) EMD SD80MAC at Cumberland, Maryland by Ed Mullan". www.railpictures.net. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  18. ^ Settle-Carlisle Railway: the Midland's Record-breaking Route to Scotland, p.46. (1966). Clapham (North Yorks.):Dalesman. W. R. Mitchell and David Joy.
  19. ^ "Historique du dépôt de Montluçon du début du XIX siècle à nos jours". www.aaatvmontlucon.fr. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  20. ^ Voies Ferrées, Edition 209, May–June 2015.
  21. ^ "Steamtown About".

railway, turntable, other, uses, turntable, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, ne. For other uses see Turntable disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Railway turntable news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message In rail terminology a railway turntable or wheelhouse is a device for turning railway rolling stock usually locomotives so that they can be moved back in the direction from which they came 1 Naturally it is especially used in areas where economic considerations or a lack of sufficient space have served to weigh against the construction of a turnaround wye In the case of steam locomotives railways needed a way to turn the locomotives around for return trips as their controls were often not configured for extended periods of running in reverse and in many locomotives the top speed was lower in reverse motion In the case of diesel locomotives though most can be operated in either direction they are treated as having front ends and rear ends often determined by reference to the location of the crew cab When a diesel locomotive is operated as a single unit the railway company often prefers or requires that it be run front end first When operated as part of a multiple unit locomotive consist the locomotives can be arranged so that the consist can be operated front end first no matter which direction the consist is pointed Turntables were also used to turn observation cars so that their windowed lounge ends faced toward the rear of the train 2 Wagon turntable at the National Slate Museum in Wales on 2 ft 610 mm gauge track A turntable at the John Street Roundhouse now part of Roundhouse Park in Toronto Canada viewed from the CN Tower in September 2012 Trench railway turntable Contents 1 History 2 Roundhouse 3 By country 3 1 Great Britain 3 2 Hungary 3 3 India 3 4 Israel 3 5 Romania 3 6 Sri Lanka 3 7 USA 4 Surviving turntables 5 Accidents 6 Unusual turntables 7 Multiple turntables 8 See also 9 ReferencesHistory Edit A turntable for the Central Railroad of New Jersey 1961 Turnplates at the Park Lane goods station of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in 1831 Early wagonways were industrial railways for transporting goods initially bulky and heavy items particularly mined stone ores and coal from one point to another most often to a dockside to be loaded onto ships 3 These early wagonways used a single point to point track and when operators had to move a truck to another wagonway they did so by hand The lack of switching technology seriously limited the weight of any loaded wagon combination 4 The first railway switches were in fact wagon turnplates or sliding rails Turnplates were initially made of two or four pieces of wood circular in form that replicated the track running through them Their diameter matched that of the wagons used on any given wagonway and they swung around a central pivot Loaded wagons could be moved onto the turnplate and rotating the turnplate 90 degrees allowed the loaded wagon to be moved to another piece of wagonway Thus wagon weight was limited only by the strength of the wood used in the turnplates or sliding rails When iron and later steel replaced stone and wood weight capacity rose again 3 However the problems with turnplates and sliding rails were twofold First they were relatively small often no more than 1 yard 0 91 m in length which limited the wagon length that could be turned Second their switching capacity could only be accessed when the wagon was on top of them and still which limited the total capacity of any wagonway The railway switch which overcame both of these problems was patented by Charles Fox in 1832 As steam locomotives replaced horses as the preferred means of power they became optimised to run in only one direction for operational ease and to provide some weather protection 3 The resulting need to turn heavy locomotives required an engineering upgrade to the existing turnplate technology Like earlier turnplates most new turntables consisted of a circular pit in which a steel bridge rotated The bridge was typically supported and balanced by the central pivot to reduce the total load on the pivot and to allow easy turning This was most often achieved by a steel rail running around the floor of the pit that supported the ends of the bridge when a locomotive entered or exited The turntables had a positive locking mechanism to prevent undesired rotation and to align the bridge rails with the exit track Rotation of the bridge could be accomplished manually either by brute force or with a windlass system popularly called an Armstrong turntable 5 6 by an external power source or by the braking system of the locomotive itself though this required a locomotive to be on the table for it to be rotated The turntable bridge the part of the turntable that included the tracks and that swivelled to turn the equipment could span from 6 to 120 feet 1 8 to 36 6 m depending on the railway s needs Larger turntables were installed in maintenance facilities for longer locomotives while short line and narrow gauge railways typically used smaller turntables Turntables as small as 6 feet 1 83 m in diameter have been installed in some industrial facilities where pieces of equipment are small enough to be pushed one at a time by humans or horsepower Roundhouse EditMain article Railway roundhouse A small turntable at the Orange Empire Railway Museum in Perris CA This type of turntable with the central tower and supporting cables is called a gallows turntable A larger turntable in front of a roundhouse 1909 In engine maintenance facilities a turntable was usually surrounded in part or in whole by a roundhouse It was more common for the roundhouse to only cover a portion of the land around a turntable but fully circular roundhouses exist such as these preserved roundhouses The roundhouse that serves as the basis for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Museum in Baltimore MD The Roundhouse in London England now an arts centre Junee Roundhouse Railway MuseumBy country Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Function of a railway turntable on Upsala Lenna Jernvag in Sweden Great Britain Edit In Britain where steam hauled trains generally have vacuum operated brakes it was quite common for turntables to be operated by vacuum motors worked from the locomotive s vacuum ejector or pump via a flexible hose or pipe although a few manually and electrically operated examples exist The major manufacturers were Ransomes and Rapier Ipswich and Cowans Sheldon Carlisle The GWR was the railway company that built several tables for its own use there is little evidence any other companies did so Hungary Edit Miskolc Tiszai railway station retains an active turntable as of December 2021 7 India Edit There was a turntable at the Talaguppa end of the Shimoga Talaguppa railway 8 and one at Howbagh Railway Station near Jabalpur on the Balaghat Jabalpur Narrow Gauge Line 9 Both were used to turn the railbuses serving on these lines After railbuses were replaced by MEMUs turntables were dismantled In 2012 Mumbai Metro One the BOT operator of the Mumbai Metro Line 1 announced that it had procured turntables to be used on the Rapid Transit system 10 Israel Edit The Israel Railway Museum Haifa has a turntable which was made by Metropolitan Carriage Wagon amp Finance Company Old Park Works Wednesbury It was found buried in the grounds of the Israel Defense Forces History Museum which is on the site of the old Jaffa railway station yard Romania Edit Like most ex socialist countries of Eastern Europe Romania still has several turntables in operational use One can even see twin turntables each with their own 180 degree roundhouse like for one example at Timisoara 11 Sri Lanka Edit In Sri Lanka most turntables which were used in the steam area have been abandoned Most were situated at the major railway yards like Kandy Galle Nanu Oya Anuradhapura Maho Galoya Trincomalee Batticaloa Polgahawela Jnc Badulla Puttulam and Bandarawela and depots in Dematagoda 2no and Maradana All turntables in Sri Lanka Railways were operated manually They were used to turn some rolling stock and non dual cab locomotives Most turntables were later scrapped though some have been preserved in museums USA Edit Due to the asymmetric design of many locomotives turntables still in use are more common in North America than in Europe where locomotive design favors configurations with a controller cabin on both ends or in the middle In San Francisco USA the Powell cable car line uses turntables at the end of the routes since the cable cars have operating controls at only one end of the car The Long Island Rail Road still has a turntable and roundhouse at the Richmond Hills yard Surviving turntables Edit A4 Pacific No 9 Union of South Africa on the Ferryhill turntable May 2019 A small turntable at the Textilmuseum Bocholt Railway Museum Spoorwegenmuseum in Utrecht Drivers turning cable car on a turntable at San Francisco Turntable on the Sabah State Railway at Papar Station Sabah Malaysia Several working examples remain many on heritage railways in Great Britain and also in the United States Some examples include Aberdeen Ferryhill 1906 70 Ransomes and Rapier Restored by Ferryhill Railway Heritage Trust and in regular use for steam charters to Aberdeen since 2019 http www frht org uk Aviemore ex Kyle of Lochalsh Barrow Hill Cowans Sheldon 5231 1931 Bryson City North Carolina Great Smoky Mountains Railroad Bethlehem Steel 1937 ex Bangor amp Aroostook Carnforth Chattanooga Tennessee Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum Soule Shops American Bridge Company 1916 ex Central of Georgia Railway Chunghua Taiwan Still working with roundhouse and open to the public synapticism com Conklin New York Working 78 foot turntable at East Binghamton railroad yard built in the 1990s operated by Canadian Pacific Railway Old roundhouse still survives near the yard on private property currently in poor condition Filled in turntable base for the roundhouse can still be seen as well Currie Minnesota s End O Line Railroad Park amp Museum Churston ex Goodrington Cultra Ulster Folk and Transport Museum Northern Ireland 60 Ransomes and Rapier table ex Athenry Co Galway Covered over with flooring can be operated when required Derby Works within Bombardiers site ca 72 dia 52 905126 1 457706 Derby Roundhouse table is in situ but under the floor see http www railblue com pages Related 20Rail 20Blue 20Info DLWorks revist htm Dublin Connolly Locomotive Depot Republic of Ireland 55 Manuf and date not known sees regular use Dublin Connolly Station Republic of Ireland Cowans Sheldon 4369 1924 45 dia still sees occasional use Dallas McKinney Avenue Darlington North Road out of use south of the station west side of line Didcot Ex Southampton Docks c 1976 70 Ransomes and Rapier E2334 1935 Fort William ex Marylebone Cowans Sheldon CS 6355 1937 refurbished by RRMH 1999 2000 Heaton NoT Hither Green at rear of depot ex Cannon Street table Hornsey Ferme Park now removed to York and in use there 2012 Guadalajara Ferromex 20 38 54 N 103 20 37 W 20 648218 N 103 343494 W 20 648218 103 343494 Kidderminster ex Fort William 70 Cowans Sheldon 8710 1945 Keighley ex Garsdale Cowans Sheldon of 1884 Rhaetian Railway Landquart 1889 and Samedan Switzerland Both are in use Neville Hill NRM York Old Oak Common the final one of the four now removed to Swanage Oyster Bay Railroad Museum Port Jervis Erie Turntable ca 1940s Port Jervis New York Railtown 1897 State Historic Park in Jamestown California Raleigh North Carolina Working 100 foot turntable 1917 in downtown district near the old Seaboard Station operated by CSX Transportation Peak Rail Rowsley South ex Mold Junction 60 CS 6181 1937 Minehead part of West Somerset Railway Pickering ex York San Francisco cable car system three in revenue service one at car barn Statfold Barn new build ca 2007 ca 15 triple gauge Scarborough ex Gateshead St Blazey Cornwall Roundhouse and associated working turntable Summerville Georgia Chattooga and Chickamauga Railway Sudbury Ontario the 100 foot working electrically powered turntable at Sudbury Yard operated by Canadian Pacific Railway sees almost daily use in turning diesels for local and mainline service Spencer North Carolina Robert Julian Roundhouse and 100 foot working turntable 1924 at the historic North Carolina Transportation Museum Swanage 55 ex Neasden LT Swindon old Works area GWR 1902 65 listed structure Tournon sur Rhone Train De L Ardeche steam train with manually operated turntable in France Tyseley Tanfield Rly Marley Hill ca 15 Toronto Railway Museum Original 120 foot CPR John St Roundhouse turntable restored in situ and operational Wansford West Seneca New York Pennsylvania Railroad Shops and Roundhouse with 108 foot turntable 1918 Yeovil Junction Cowans Sheldon works no 9031 of ca 1946 Whitehead Northern Ireland installed 2016 ex Belfast Central Services Depot Manufacturer diameter and date not known The following are in storage awaiting installation at UK sites Barry Rly 65 outer race Dismantled ex Bricklayers Arms 1970s moved from Mid Hants Rly North Norfolk Rly Dismantled to be installed at Holt 2017 Ex South Devon Rly ex Hull Botanic Gardens in 2005 built 1955 60 ft Midland Railway Centre Swanwick Jnc Dismantled Hand powered Balanced 60 ex Chinley Severn Valley Rly Dismantled ex Bristol Bath Road Stored at Eardington Intention is to install at Bridgnorth 65 3 Ransom Rapier built 1957 12 East Lancs Rly Dismantled ex Germany stored at Buckley Wells Dean Forest Rly Dismantled ex Calais Shed SNCF ex MLST Loughborough Mid Norfolk Rly 60 Dismantled R amp R 1933 ex Hitchin LNER ex Quainton never installed there to be installed at Dereham WCRC stored Dismantled at Carnforth was proposed for Weymouth ex Tyseley Locomotive Works Ltd onetime proposal to install at Stratford upon Avon ex Thornaby Swanage Rly Furzebrook ex Old Oak Common Depot 2011 BR WR 70 125T E CS 9709 53 in use at Old Oak Common until 2008 used for HST power car turning etc Mallaig Network Rail Dismantled scheme to install the ex Whitchurch table which is stored at Corpach or Fort William Stainmore Rly Co Kirkby Stephen East 50 or 65 outer race hand powered Ex Darlington station Moved 1 2017 New build turntable Hitachi Rail Europe s rolling stock plant at Newton Aycliffe in County Durham has an 80 tonne locomotive turntable and a bogie test turntable supplied by Lloyds British Somers Group in 2016 The former Chicago Milwaukee St Paul amp Pacific Milwaukee Road in Janesville Wisconsin Used now by the regional Wisconsin amp SouthernAccidents EditThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the United States when deciding liability for turntable accidents most state courts followed the precedent set by the United States Supreme Court in Sioux City amp Pacific R R v Stout 1873 13 In that case a six year old child was playing on the unguarded unfenced turntable when his friends began turning it While attempting to get off his foot became stuck and was crushed The Court held that although the railroad was not bound by the same duty of care to strangers as it was to its passengers it would be liable for negligence if from the evidence given it might justly be inferred by the jury that the defendant in the construction location management or condition of its machine has omitted that care and attention to prevent the occurrence of accidents which prudent and careful men ordinarily bestow 14 In the case of Chicago B amp Q R Co v Krayenbuhl 1902 a four year old child was playing on an unlocked unguarded railroad turntable Other children set the turntable in motion and it severed the ankle of the young child The child s family sued the railroad company on a theory of negligence and won at trial The Nebraska Supreme Court held that the railroad company may have been liable for negligence after considering the character and location of the premises the purpose for which they are used the probability of injury therefrom the precautions necessary to prevent such injury and the relations such precautions bear to the beneficial use of the premises However the Supreme Court reversed the trial court s decision based on an improper jury instruction as to the evidence 15 Accidents to locomotives sometimes occurred For example if the turntable was incorrectly set and a locomotive was accidentally started or failed to stop it might fall into the turntable pit 16 17 On rare occasions a turntable would spin too fast during high winds as happened at Garsdale Settle Carlisle line in the UK c 1900 At this very exposed location this was resolved by surrounding the turntable with a wooden stockade made from old sleepers 18 specify Unusual turntables Edit A heavy German goods locomotive on the turntable at the German Steam Locomotive Museum Bavaria The pivot of this turntable is off center which prevents the turntable from rotating a full 360 degrees Twin gauge straight curved turntable at Petit Train a Vapeur de Forest Brussels The roundhouse in Montlucon France was equipped with a separate turntable and sector plate which is a table pivoted at one end in this case at the edge of the turntable The sector plate served the side of the roundhouse that housed autorails with less requirement for turning Both the turntable and sector plate were served by separate connections to the roundhouse If turning was required the two could be connected together The resulting roundhouse was not completely circular Part of the roundhouse with the turntable is still extant 19 20 A similar operational sector plate is located in Bavaria at the German Steam Locomotive Museum Due to a lack of space at Ventnor railway station a small turntable was provided to allow steam engines to run around their trains Other stations with this arrangement included Bembridge Withernsea and Harcourt Street The last remaining operational triple gauge turntable in the world used to station trains into the 23 bay roundhouse exists at the Steamtown Heritage Centre in Peterborough South Australia 21 A turntable exists on the Midland Line New Zealand at Arthurs Pass in New Zealand Steam engines on excursions cannot enter the Otira tunnel so must be turned around for the returnMultiple turntables EditStations housing large numbers of engines may have more than one turntable Old Oak Common TMD formerly 4 Enfield formerly 3 none survives today Broadmeadow 2 Falun 2 Hallsberg 2 Goteborg Savenas yard 2 Second removed 2005 Linwood formerly 2 second removed during 1980 1990s Valladolid 41 38 25 N 4 43 45 W 41 6403 N 4 7292 W 41 6403 4 7292 2See also EditList of railway roundhouses most or all of which include a turntable Wye a way of turning whole trains Transfer table UK traverser provides access to two or more parallel tracks in a space saving manner like a turntable but without the ability to turn A Sector plate or sector table is a traverser that rotates around a pivot that is not at the centre and therefore cannot rotate through 360 Nowadays control cars or coaches with controls at one end have largely eliminated the need for turntables Singapore and Hong Kong have a combined traverser turntable that takes 4 car sets References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rail transport turntables Locomotive Railway Turntables Macton com Archived from the original on 2017 04 22 Retrieved 2014 10 20 The Elements of Railroad Engineering 5th Edition 1937 William G Raymond Published by John Wiley and Sons New York a b c Alun John Richards 16 March 2011 The Rails and Sails of Welsh Slate Llygad Gwalch Cyf ISBN 978 1845241742 David Oldroyd 13 Nov 2007 Estates Enterprise and Investment at the Dawn of the Industrial Revolution Ashgate ISBN 978 0754634553 McGuirk Marty 2002 The Model Railroader s Guide to Locomotive Servicing Terminals 1st ed Waukesha WI Kalmbach Books p 41 ISBN 0 89024 414 6 via Google Books A lever was installed at both ends of the bridge and the table was moved by hand a method popularly called Armstrong Turntable American Rails com Retrieved January 31 2021 https www openstreetmap org map 19 48 09409 20 79971 Openstreetmap retrieved 2021 12 11 A trip on the Shimoga Town Talguppa MG railbus Irfca org Archived from the original on 2007 12 20 Retrieved 2008 02 21 Blog entry on IRI Aklekar Rajendra 16 July 2012 Metro retro Forgotten turn tables back on track Mumbai Daily News and Analysis Retrieved 2012 07 22 https www openstreetmap org map 18 45 75201 21 20205 Openstreetmap retrieved 2021 12 11 Severn Valley Railway News Issue 126 Epstein Richard A 2008 Cases and Materials on Torts 9th ed United States of America Aspen Publishers p 589 ISBN 978 0 7355 6923 2 Sioux City amp Pacific R R v Stout 84 U S 657 661 1873 Chicago B amp Q R Co v Krayenbuhl 65 Neb 889 91 N W 880 Neb 1902 RailPictures Net Photo LN 1250 Louisville amp Nashville Steam 2 8 0 at Pensacola Florida by Collection of Ron Flanary www railpictures net Retrieved 7 April 2018 RailPictures Net Photo CSXT 806 CSX Transportation CSXT EMD SD80MAC at Cumberland Maryland by Ed Mullan www railpictures net Retrieved 7 April 2018 Settle Carlisle Railway the Midland s Record breaking Route to Scotland p 46 1966 Clapham North Yorks Dalesman W R Mitchell and David Joy Historique du depot de Montlucon du debut du XIX siecle a nos jours www aaatvmontlucon fr Retrieved 7 April 2018 Voies Ferrees Edition 209 May June 2015 Steamtown About Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Railway turntable amp oldid 1132103047, 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