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Road–rail vehicle

A road–rail vehicle or a rail–road vehicle is a dual-mode vehicle which can operate both on rail tracks and roads.[1][2] They are also known as two-way vehicles (German: Zweiwegefahrzeug),[3] hi-rail (from highway and railway, or variations such as high-rail, HiRail, Hy-rail),[4] and rail and road vehicles.[5]

Road–rail excavator
British jeep in France, 1945

They are often converted road vehicles, keeping their normal wheels with rubber tires, but fitted with additional flanged steel wheels for running on rails. Propulsion is typically through the conventional tires, the flanged wheels being free-rolling, used to keep the vehicle on the rails; the rail wheels are raised and lowered as needed. There are also purpose-built road–rail vehicles. In case of jeep trains, road wheels are directly replaced with railway wheels. Vehicles with tires need special areas like level crossings to change modes. A vehicle on caterpillar tracks rather than road wheels, which allows mode change anywhere without the need to use a level crossing, has been proposed and modelled by Chinese engineers.[6]

Overview edit

 
Certis Unimog, road–rail vehicle used for vegetation control

Most of such vehicles are used for railroad right-of-way maintenance during engineering possessions of the line, when a section of the line is handed over for maintenance and operational trains are blocked from entering the section. Military used railroad vehicles take advantage of intact railways for locomotion or are used as emergency locomotives. The usage as passenger buses is rare and mostly experimental. Maintenance railroad vehicles can be driven on roads to near the site and then converted to a rail vehicle for the final journey to the worksite. This avoids the complex maneuvers that would be associated with a road vehicle accessing a worksite that is not near a road. Since they are normally converted road vehicles, they would not fare well in a collision with heavy rolling stock and therefore can normally only drive on rail tracks under an engineering possession, when the line is closed to normal traffic. They are generally designed to be insulated, thus they do not activate railway signalling circuits. Nevertheless, some rail operators prefer them to be non-insulated so that they are detectable by train safety systems. The latter operators normally deploy them on remote lines without boom gates etc.

History edit

 
Type 95 armoured railroad car So-Ki (九五式装甲軌道車) on tracks, pulling some cars

An early promoter of the road-rail system was Brigadier General Robert Stronach, part of a company called Roadrails Ltd formed around 1920. Roadrails Ltd held a number of patents regarding vehicles that could run on the road or on rail.[7] The idea was that rails offered less rolling resistance while roads offered greater tractive effort, and the combination would allow either greater loads to be hauled, or loads to be hauled on steeper gradients thereby reducing a major cost of building a railway. In 1922 Stronach patented a road-rail tractor which could be driven on the road, or have a front set of rail wheels jacked down to allow it to haul a load on rails - guided by the rails but driven by the rear road wheels. A road-rail tractor of this type resembling a normal road truck was part of the 1924 British Empire Exhibition at Wembley where it hauled coaches around the exhibition area.[8]

One problem with the road-rail tractor was reversing while on the rails, but the ability to raise the bogie and swap to road mode allowed it to run round the train. At their 1923 annual general meeting they said their new method for converting from road to rail now only took 2 minutes. They were "completing designs for a caterpillar type" and of another type for tram service.[9]

Unfortunately Roadrails Ltd later focussed on locomotives that were rail-only but used road wheel for traction either side of the track, and moved away from the style of vehicle shown at the Exhibition with its usefulness in factory yards, dockyards, etc where it could function on road or rail. A 'Road-rail' branch was built in South Africa, and this used two road-rail locomotives, both converted from steam traction engines. One could be used on road or rail but the other used a Dutton patent (see South African Dutton road-rail tractors), whereby a rail vehicle used road wheel traction. i.e. it required both road and rail to function. In the end the experiment was unsuccessful and the branch reverted to normal steam engines by about 1927, and Roadrails Ltd was closed down around the same time.

Military usage edit

 
Road–rail version of FAI armoured car

BAD-2 was a Soviet experimental amphibious armoured car first produced in 1932, which could also go on rail tracks.[10] The changing for rail mode took 30 minutes.

From 1933 on, small numbers of FAI-ZhD were produced.[11] FAI-ZhD was a modification of FAI for additional railway usage. The speed on rails was 85 km/h forward and 24 km/h reverse. The road speed was 40 km/h. The changing of modes took the crew 30 minutes.

From 1933 on, the Japanese Empire started to produce the Sumida M.2593.[12] It was a 7.7 ton 10 mm armoured vehicle with 6 wheels. The road wheels could be replaced by flanged wheels for railways. Its speed was 40 km/h on road and 60 km/h on rail.[13]

The Type 95 So-Ki was a tankette produced in the Japanese Empire between 1935 and 1943.[14] It had tank tracks for ground travel and retractable flanged wheels for railways. Changing from railway to ground mode took one minute, and changing from ground to railways took three minutes. In addition, the flanged wheels could be adjusted for narrow, standard and broad gauge railway tracks.[15]

The BTR-40 ZhD was the armored personnel carrier BTR-40 equipped with additional rail wheels.[16] It was further developed to the railway version of BTR-40A in 1969.[17] Rerailment took 3–5 minutes. Its road speed was 78 km/h and its rail speed was 65 km/h.

Road–rail buses edit

 
Lucas Aerospace Workers' Road-Rail Bus, 1980
 
Schienen-Straßen-Omnibus
 
A Jenny Railcar

Attempts have been made over the years to design buses and coaches that could operate on both roads and railway tracks. Siemens & Halske presented an electric street car bus (German: Straßenbahn-Omnibus) in 1898 in Berlin.[18] This vehicle ran on batteries and had a range of 6 km.

Some attempts were carried out in Britain during the 1930s, on the Nickey Line by LMS, using a Ro-Railer.[19]

 
Evans Auto-Railer; Harris & Ewing; 1930

In the 1930s, the Evans Products Company in the USA marketed the Evans Auto-Railer, a bus designed to also travel on railway tracks.[20] The Evans Auto-Railer could also transport freight of 2.5–3 t and go on wet, icy and snow-covered railtracks.[21] In the winter 1934-35, an experimental unit made 2,500 miles (4,023 km).

In the early 1940s, engineer Talon developed a system in which a normal street bus ran on rails and was able to pull a light Decauville railcar sidecar. The bus drove over a special ramp to two-track wagons, after which the front wheels no longer touched the rails, but the inside of the rear double wheels remained in contact with the track. At least one of these vehicles powered by wood gas was used in Summer 1943 on the 54 km (34 mi) long railway line from Carcassonne to Quillan.[22]

The Deutsche Bundesbahn operated buses, called the Schi-Stra-Bus [de], that could be fitted with separate bogies in different areas from the 1950s to 1970s.

In 1967–68, two Red Arrow Lines diesel buses were converted so that they could also run on rails.[23][24] This experiment did not succeed, because the requirements for railcars and road vehicles were too different.

In 1983, Greater London Council considered investing £230,000 into the Lucas rail-bus, which could run on roads and rail tracks.[25] The original concept was developed by Lucas Aerospace workers in the 1970s. In 1980–1981, the workers' combine built a prototype out of a second-hand Bristol bus.[25] The enthusiasm arose from the opportunity to cut costs on rail vehicle production by partially integrating bus parts.[25] Two challenges had to be solved: collision consequences with much heavier rail vehicles and supervision of the transition from road to rail.[25]

A Japanese vehicle changing from bus mode into railcar mode

Railroad buses were also developed in Japan, by JR Hokkaido in 2002, under the name DMV (Dual Mode Vehicle).[26] The DMV920 model no longer used external bogies; the two axles that are carried along are only lowered on the single rail. A test vehicle (DMV901) began trials in January 2004 and DMV911/912 began in September 2005. Further testing began on 4 April 2007, on the Senmo Line between Mokoto and Hama-koshimizu. One leg is from Hama-koshimizu to Mokoto (about 11 km) as a rail trip and Mokoto to Hama-koshimizu as a passenger bus (about 25 km). DMV920 was completed in June 2008 with a capacity of 28 passengers.[27] Asa Kaigan Railway started dual mode buses on 25 December 2021.[28]

On Abilene and Smoky Valley Railroad, the hyrail bus Silver Flyer Rail Bus is used for excursion, which can travel on both road and rail.[29][30]

In 2022, SNCF has presented the concept of FLEXY, a road-rail fully electric autonomous shuttle for areas of low population density.[31][32] The first experiments are planned for 2024.

Manufacturers edit

Evans Auto-Railer was a pioneer in the US in the 1930s and 1940s.[33] Evans seems to have produced all road–rail vehicle adaptations for the US military during WWII, but was rapidly overtaken by Fairmont immediately post-war.

Aries Hyrail branded vehicles have been manufactured in Australia for several decades. Aries Hyrail vehicles continue to be manufactured by Aries Rail.[34][full citation needed]

UK-based Permaquip manufactures highway-based road rail vehicles, trailers, and attachments with simple and safe designs that improve safety and productivity.[35]

Continental Railworks is a road–rail conversion unit manufacturer based in Montreal, Canada, producing hi-rail units since 1997. Their products are known for the automatic locking / unlocking feature and for the rubber spring induced downforce applied to the rails.[36][full citation needed]

A vehicle on caterpillar tracks rather than road wheels, which allows mode change anywhere without the need to use a level crossing, has been proposed and modelled by Chinese engineers.[6]

Vollert Anlagenbau GmbH has developed a unmanned road-rail remote controlled vehicle VLEX for shunting up to 300 t.[37][38]

Inbiuro is a UK based engineering company that designs and builds road-rail vehicles on demand. Their machines can be found in Poland and in UK. An example is vehicle PT9-RRV designed and built for very tight track bends for Bydgoszcz city trams railways maintenance. The vehicle drives on tracks of 1000 mm rail gauge.[citation needed]

Sweden based Goldschmidt Sweden is one of the leading manufacturers of road-rail vehicles with nearly five decades of experience in the industry. Their range encompasses catenary maintenance vehicles, tunnel and bridge inspection vehicles, measurement vehicles, grinding and welding vehicles, and other customized road-rail solutions.

Road-transferable locomotive edit

 
Road–rail vehicle train brake control

The RTL is a truck with railway wheels that can be lowered when operating on the railway tracks. It was pioneered in the early 1990s by Australian National and later refined in Victoria. The idea was to have a locomotive that could transfer from one branch line carrying mainly wheat to another parallel branch line, where the rail connection is very roundabout. The RTL suffered a number of disadvantages. Loads were severely limited when the track was steeply graded. The rubber traction wheels slipped on the steel rails when wet. The life of the rubber tires was rather short.

The Canadian company Brandt has also converted large truck tractor units for use as locomotives that can move by road to where they are needed. Still mostly used for permanent way maintenance, they can also be employed as thunderbird (rescue) locomotives or even used in normal service, where they are suitable for smaller operators.

In East Germany some Fortschritt ZT 300 tractors were used in road–rail service.

Shunting edit

 
Shunting vehicle UCA-TRAC B16

Road–rail vehicles also serve as motive power for shunting (switching), the process of sorting items of rolling stock into complete trains, or the reverse.

In Belgium, the company UCA produces the UCA-TRAC, road–rail vehicles based on the chassis of a JCB Load-All (UCA-TRAC B) and JCB Fastrac (UCA-TRAC F). The UCA-TRAC provides traction through its rubber wheels and is designed to act as a rail car mover.

In Australia, similar vehicles are built by Aries Rail using Volvo loaders and AUSA telehandlers. These vehicles are able to be used for other purposes such as shovelling or forklifting whilst not operating on-rail.

Such vehicles often have cabin-mounted controls for the railway air brake system so that the driver can apply and release the train brakes during shunting manoeuvres. In order to charge the train brake air hose, an air compressor needs to be fitted to the road–rail vehicle.

Unimog road-railer edit

 
Unimog two-way vehicle

The Unimog road-railer is used for maintenance and shunting tasks.[39] It can pull up to 1000 t and operate a snow cutter. Unimog can drive on standard gauge as well as various international broad gauges with its own wheels. The mechanical engine power of the Unimog is 160 kW and it achieves a speed of 90 km/h on roads and 50 km/h on rails. It needs a leveled area of 5 m length for a rail/road changeover.

Maintenance edit

 
Old Montreal Metro maintenance tractor

Rolling stock maintenance edit

Self-propelled maintenance vehicles for maintenance of the track and for shunting wagons are much more convenient to use if they can transfer to the road to reposition or otherwise get out of the way. Because relatively light loads are involved, the problems plaguing the Road Transferable Locomotive are avoided.

An example would be a forklift truck fitted with railway wheels and a coupling with which to shunt a wagon or two.

In Belgium, the company UCA bvba has been constructing road–rail vehicles since 1981. UCA started with converting WF-trac and MB-trac for rail traction uses. They built rail car movers, shunting locotractors and other road–rail vehicles. Best known is the UCA-TRAC, based on the chassis of a JCB Load-All (UCA-TRAC B) and Fastrac (UCA-TRAC F). The UCA-TRAC provides traction through its rubber wheels.[citation needed]

Safety issues edit

 
MAN heavy technical assistance shunting vehicle truck with a crane and drawbar for trams
 
This road–rail truck's forward rail wheels lift its forward road wheels up off the track, leaving only the two inner back wheels on the rails.

Road–rail vehicles, particularly those used for inspection purposes, have been involved in a number of serious incidents, including deaths. There has been ongoing discussion[clarification needed] regarding maintenance and inspection standards, including load and load distribution, to minimise the risk of failures.

Factors leading to derailment include failed locking equipment, wheel failure, damaged rail wheel support systems, inappropriate tires, and uneven or overloading issues.[citation needed]

In the UK, technical requirements for road–rail vehicles are the subject of a Rail Industry Standard (RIS-1530-PLT). In Australia, the Rail Industry Safety and Standards Board (RISSB) is working with manufacturers and operators to produce an Australian standard to which road–rail vehicles must comply.

When operating in road-going mode, drivers have to remember that the dynamics of the vehicle will be changed due to the increased weight at the front and rear of the chassis. Some manufacturers have developed systems that allow the rail wheels to be stored almost entirely inside the original bodywork thus moving the centre of mass closer to the road axles. This greatly improves the on-road driving performance of the vehicle.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Japan: road-rail midi-buses on a rural railway". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  2. ^ "SRS Rail System International Ltd". Railway-News. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  3. ^ Beaujot, Ralf (3 May 2007). "Wagon brake system in a two-way vehicle". Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  4. ^ "Rail Insider-Technology update: Hi-rail equipment. Information For Rail Career Professionals From Progressive Railroading Magazine". Progressive Railroading. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  5. ^ "The Paragraph reports on our new rail and road vehicle". SLW. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  6. ^ a b Qin, Bonan; Zeng, Riya; Li, Xiaoman; Yang, Jue (3 March 2021). "Design and Performance Analysis of the Hydropneumatic Suspension System for a Novel Road-Rail Vehicle". Applied Sciences. 11 (5): 2221. doi:10.3390/app11052221.
  7. ^ "New Haulage System for Sutherlandshire". Northern Ensign and Weekly Gazette. 19 July 1922. p. 7.
  8. ^ "At Wembley : "Road-Rail" Tractors". Illustrated London News. 19 January 1924. p. 19.
  9. ^ "Roadrails (Limited)". The Scotsman. 31 May 1923. p. 4.
  10. ^ Kolomiet︠s︡, Maksim; Коломиец, Максим (2007). Broni︠a︡ na kolesakh : istorii︠a︡ sovetskogo broneavtomobili︠a︡, 1925–1945. Moscow: I︠A︡uza. ISBN 978-5-699-21870-7.
  11. ^ Kinnear, Jim (2000). Russian armoured cars, 1930–2000 (PDF). Darlington, Maryland: Darlington Productions. ISBN 1-892848-05-8. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  12. ^ "Sumida M.2593 (Type 91)". www.militaryfactory.com. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  13. ^ Taki's Imperial Japanese Army: Type 91 Armored Railroad Car
  14. ^ Zaloga, Steven J. (20 July 2011). Armored Trains. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84908-958-6. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  15. ^ "So-Ki". www3.plala.or.jp. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  16. ^ Zaloga, Steven J. (20 July 2011). Armored Trains. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-84908-958-6. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  17. ^ "Armored carrier BTR-40A on railway". Kubinka tank museum. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  18. ^ Schindler, Mattis (2009). Obusse in Deutschland Bd. 1. Berlin, Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg, Bremen, Niedersachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt, Thüringen, Sachsen, frühere deutsche Ostgebiete. Nordhorn. ISBN 978-3-933613-34-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. ^ "The LMS Ro-Railer". www.warwickshirerailways.com. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  20. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "For Both Road and Rail: The Evans Auto-Railer". www.macsmotorcitygarage.com. 29 February 2020. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
    • . Archived from the original on 27 March 2015. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  21. ^ "Evans Auto-Railer: dual-purpose transportation units". Hagley Digital Archives. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  22. ^ Clive Lamming (2006), Trains de Légende: Les Réseaux français et la Naissance de la SNCF (1938–1950) (in German), p. 105, ISBN 2-8302-2147-8
  23. ^ "Red Arrow Lines Railbus Experiments 1967 1968 P&W and Media Trolley Lines". YouTube. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  24. ^ Sadowski, David (2 December 2016). "Raymond Loewy". The Trolley Dodger. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  25. ^ a b c d Lucas rail-bus gains a new lease of life. Reed Business Information. August 1983. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  26. ^ "編集長敬白アーカイブ|鉄道ホビダス". rail.hobidas.com.
  27. ^ Japan Railway & Transport Review No. 51. pp. 28–39. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  28. ^ "Japan to get world's 1st operational bus-train dual-mode vehicle". Kyodo News+. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  29. ^ Albin, Jonathan; Ben, M. (2017). "Abilene and Smoky Valley Railroad". Clio: Your Guide to History. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  30. ^ "Rail Plan 2005–2006" (PDF). Kansas Department of Transportation. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  31. ^ online, heise. "Mit 'Flexy' vor die Haustür: SNCF testet Mini-Zug in Frankreich". heise online (in German). Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  32. ^ "Yellow Window Supports SNCF's Innovations Serving Tomorrow's Mobility". Railway-News. 28 February 2022. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  33. ^ "Chevrolet Leader News (Vol. 1, No. 2) : Handy (Jam) Organization : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive". Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  34. ^ Aries Hyrail
  35. ^ Permaquip
  36. ^ Continental Railworks
  37. ^ "Vollert develops VLEX road-rail shunting robot". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  38. ^ "2-Wege-Robot VLEX für Schiene und Straße" (PDF). Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  39. ^ "Mercedes-Benz Presents the Unimog at InnoTrans 2018: The Unimog Road-Railer: Efficient on Road and Rail". Targeted News Service. 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2022.

External links edit

  • 1935 Evans Auto Railer Jackson MI
  • 2022 FLEXI concept
  • Brekina Schi-stra-bus
  • Dual-Mode bus
  • VLEX Road-rail shunting robot

road, rail, vehicle, road, rail, vehicle, rail, road, vehicle, dual, mode, vehicle, which, operate, both, rail, tracks, roads, they, also, known, vehicles, german, zweiwegefahrzeug, rail, from, highway, railway, variations, such, high, rail, hirail, rail, rail. A road rail vehicle or a rail road vehicle is a dual mode vehicle which can operate both on rail tracks and roads 1 2 They are also known as two way vehicles German Zweiwegefahrzeug 3 hi rail from highway and railway or variations such as high rail HiRail Hy rail 4 and rail and road vehicles 5 Road rail excavatorBritish jeep in France 1945They are often converted road vehicles keeping their normal wheels with rubber tires but fitted with additional flanged steel wheels for running on rails Propulsion is typically through the conventional tires the flanged wheels being free rolling used to keep the vehicle on the rails the rail wheels are raised and lowered as needed There are also purpose built road rail vehicles In case of jeep trains road wheels are directly replaced with railway wheels Vehicles with tires need special areas like level crossings to change modes A vehicle on caterpillar tracks rather than road wheels which allows mode change anywhere without the need to use a level crossing has been proposed and modelled by Chinese engineers 6 Contents 1 Overview 2 History 3 Military usage 4 Road rail buses 5 Manufacturers 6 Road transferable locomotive 6 1 Shunting 6 2 Unimog road railer 7 Maintenance 7 1 Rolling stock maintenance 8 Safety issues 9 See also 10 Notes 11 External linksOverview edit nbsp Certis Unimog road rail vehicle used for vegetation controlMost of such vehicles are used for railroad right of way maintenance during engineering possessions of the line when a section of the line is handed over for maintenance and operational trains are blocked from entering the section Military used railroad vehicles take advantage of intact railways for locomotion or are used as emergency locomotives The usage as passenger buses is rare and mostly experimental Maintenance railroad vehicles can be driven on roads to near the site and then converted to a rail vehicle for the final journey to the worksite This avoids the complex maneuvers that would be associated with a road vehicle accessing a worksite that is not near a road Since they are normally converted road vehicles they would not fare well in a collision with heavy rolling stock and therefore can normally only drive on rail tracks under an engineering possession when the line is closed to normal traffic They are generally designed to be insulated thus they do not activate railway signalling circuits Nevertheless some rail operators prefer them to be non insulated so that they are detectable by train safety systems The latter operators normally deploy them on remote lines without boom gates etc History edit nbsp Type 95 armoured railroad car So Ki 九五式装甲軌道車 on tracks pulling some carsAn early promoter of the road rail system was Brigadier General Robert Stronach part of a company called Roadrails Ltd formed around 1920 Roadrails Ltd held a number of patents regarding vehicles that could run on the road or on rail 7 The idea was that rails offered less rolling resistance while roads offered greater tractive effort and the combination would allow either greater loads to be hauled or loads to be hauled on steeper gradients thereby reducing a major cost of building a railway In 1922 Stronach patented a road rail tractor which could be driven on the road or have a front set of rail wheels jacked down to allow it to haul a load on rails guided by the rails but driven by the rear road wheels A road rail tractor of this type resembling a normal road truck was part of the 1924 British Empire Exhibition at Wembley where it hauled coaches around the exhibition area 8 One problem with the road rail tractor was reversing while on the rails but the ability to raise the bogie and swap to road mode allowed it to run round the train At their 1923 annual general meeting they said their new method for converting from road to rail now only took 2 minutes They were completing designs for a caterpillar type and of another type for tram service 9 Unfortunately Roadrails Ltd later focussed on locomotives that were rail only but used road wheel for traction either side of the track and moved away from the style of vehicle shown at the Exhibition with its usefulness in factory yards dockyards etc where it could function on road or rail A Road rail branch was built in South Africa and this used two road rail locomotives both converted from steam traction engines One could be used on road or rail but the other used a Dutton patent see South African Dutton road rail tractors whereby a rail vehicle used road wheel traction i e it required both road and rail to function In the end the experiment was unsuccessful and the branch reverted to normal steam engines by about 1927 and Roadrails Ltd was closed down around the same time Military usage edit nbsp Road rail version of FAI armoured carBAD 2 was a Soviet experimental amphibious armoured car first produced in 1932 which could also go on rail tracks 10 The changing for rail mode took 30 minutes From 1933 on small numbers of FAI ZhD were produced 11 FAI ZhD was a modification of FAI for additional railway usage The speed on rails was 85 km h forward and 24 km h reverse The road speed was 40 km h The changing of modes took the crew 30 minutes From 1933 on the Japanese Empire started to produce the Sumida M 2593 12 It was a 7 7 ton 10 mm armoured vehicle with 6 wheels The road wheels could be replaced by flanged wheels for railways Its speed was 40 km h on road and 60 km h on rail 13 The Type 95 So Ki was a tankette produced in the Japanese Empire between 1935 and 1943 14 It had tank tracks for ground travel and retractable flanged wheels for railways Changing from railway to ground mode took one minute and changing from ground to railways took three minutes In addition the flanged wheels could be adjusted for narrow standard and broad gauge railway tracks 15 The BTR 40 ZhD was the armored personnel carrier BTR 40 equipped with additional rail wheels 16 It was further developed to the railway version of BTR 40A in 1969 17 Rerailment took 3 5 minutes Its road speed was 78 km h and its rail speed was 65 km h Road rail buses editFor buses guided on flat tracks see Guided bus For lightweight passenger railcars see Railbus nbsp Lucas Aerospace Workers Road Rail Bus 1980 nbsp Schienen Strassen Omnibus nbsp A Jenny RailcarAttempts have been made over the years to design buses and coaches that could operate on both roads and railway tracks Siemens amp Halske presented an electric street car bus German Strassenbahn Omnibus in 1898 in Berlin 18 This vehicle ran on batteries and had a range of 6 km Some attempts were carried out in Britain during the 1930s on the Nickey Line by LMS using a Ro Railer 19 nbsp Evans Auto Railer Harris amp Ewing 1930In the 1930s the Evans Products Company in the USA marketed the Evans Auto Railer a bus designed to also travel on railway tracks 20 The Evans Auto Railer could also transport freight of 2 5 3 t and go on wet icy and snow covered railtracks 21 In the winter 1934 35 an experimental unit made 2 500 miles 4 023 km In the early 1940s engineer Talon developed a system in which a normal street bus ran on rails and was able to pull a light Decauville railcar sidecar The bus drove over a special ramp to two track wagons after which the front wheels no longer touched the rails but the inside of the rear double wheels remained in contact with the track At least one of these vehicles powered by wood gas was used in Summer 1943 on the 54 km 34 mi long railway line from Carcassonne to Quillan 22 The Deutsche Bundesbahn operated buses called the Schi Stra Bus de that could be fitted with separate bogies in different areas from the 1950s to 1970s In 1967 68 two Red Arrow Lines diesel buses were converted so that they could also run on rails 23 24 This experiment did not succeed because the requirements for railcars and road vehicles were too different In 1983 Greater London Council considered investing 230 000 into the Lucas rail bus which could run on roads and rail tracks 25 The original concept was developed by Lucas Aerospace workers in the 1970s In 1980 1981 the workers combine built a prototype out of a second hand Bristol bus 25 The enthusiasm arose from the opportunity to cut costs on rail vehicle production by partially integrating bus parts 25 Two challenges had to be solved collision consequences with much heavier rail vehicles and supervision of the transition from road to rail 25 source source source source source source source source A Japanese vehicle changing from bus mode into railcar modeRailroad buses were also developed in Japan by JR Hokkaido in 2002 under the name DMV Dual Mode Vehicle 26 The DMV920 model no longer used external bogies the two axles that are carried along are only lowered on the single rail A test vehicle DMV901 began trials in January 2004 and DMV911 912 began in September 2005 Further testing began on 4 April 2007 on the Senmo Line between Mokoto and Hama koshimizu One leg is from Hama koshimizu to Mokoto about 11 km as a rail trip and Mokoto to Hama koshimizu as a passenger bus about 25 km DMV920 was completed in June 2008 with a capacity of 28 passengers 27 Asa Kaigan Railway started dual mode buses on 25 December 2021 28 On Abilene and Smoky Valley Railroad the hyrail bus Silver Flyer Rail Bus is used for excursion which can travel on both road and rail 29 30 In 2022 SNCF has presented the concept of FLEXY a road rail fully electric autonomous shuttle for areas of low population density 31 32 The first experiments are planned for 2024 Manufacturers editEvans Auto Railer was a pioneer in the US in the 1930s and 1940s 33 Evans seems to have produced all road rail vehicle adaptations for the US military during WWII but was rapidly overtaken by Fairmont immediately post war Aries Hyrail branded vehicles have been manufactured in Australia for several decades Aries Hyrail vehicles continue to be manufactured by Aries Rail 34 full citation needed UK based Permaquip manufactures highway based road rail vehicles trailers and attachments with simple and safe designs that improve safety and productivity 35 Continental Railworks is a road rail conversion unit manufacturer based in Montreal Canada producing hi rail units since 1997 Their products are known for the automatic locking unlocking feature and for the rubber spring induced downforce applied to the rails 36 full citation needed A vehicle on caterpillar tracks rather than road wheels which allows mode change anywhere without the need to use a level crossing has been proposed and modelled by Chinese engineers 6 Vollert Anlagenbau GmbH has developed a unmanned road rail remote controlled vehicle VLEX for shunting up to 300 t 37 38 Inbiuro is a UK based engineering company that designs and builds road rail vehicles on demand Their machines can be found in Poland and in UK An example is vehicle PT9 RRV designed and built for very tight track bends for Bydgoszcz city trams railways maintenance The vehicle drives on tracks of 1000 mm rail gauge citation needed Sweden based Goldschmidt Sweden is one of the leading manufacturers of road rail vehicles with nearly five decades of experience in the industry Their range encompasses catenary maintenance vehicles tunnel and bridge inspection vehicles measurement vehicles grinding and welding vehicles and other customized road rail solutions Road transferable locomotive editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Road rail vehicle train brake controlThe RTL is a truck with railway wheels that can be lowered when operating on the railway tracks It was pioneered in the early 1990s by Australian National and later refined in Victoria The idea was to have a locomotive that could transfer from one branch line carrying mainly wheat to another parallel branch line where the rail connection is very roundabout The RTL suffered a number of disadvantages Loads were severely limited when the track was steeply graded The rubber traction wheels slipped on the steel rails when wet The life of the rubber tires was rather short The Canadian company Brandt has also converted large truck tractor units for use as locomotives that can move by road to where they are needed Still mostly used for permanent way maintenance they can also be employed as thunderbird rescue locomotives or even used in normal service where they are suitable for smaller operators In East Germany some Fortschritt ZT 300 tractors were used in road rail service Shunting edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Shunting vehicle UCA TRAC B16Road rail vehicles also serve as motive power for shunting switching the process of sorting items of rolling stock into complete trains or the reverse In Belgium the company UCA produces the UCA TRAC road rail vehicles based on the chassis of a JCB Load All UCA TRAC B and JCB Fastrac UCA TRAC F The UCA TRAC provides traction through its rubber wheels and is designed to act as a rail car mover In Australia similar vehicles are built by Aries Rail using Volvo loaders and AUSA telehandlers These vehicles are able to be used for other purposes such as shovelling or forklifting whilst not operating on rail Such vehicles often have cabin mounted controls for the railway air brake system so that the driver can apply and release the train brakes during shunting manoeuvres In order to charge the train brake air hose an air compressor needs to be fitted to the road rail vehicle Unimog road railer edit nbsp Unimog two way vehicleThe Unimog road railer is used for maintenance and shunting tasks 39 It can pull up to 1000 t and operate a snow cutter Unimog can drive on standard gauge as well as various international broad gauges with its own wheels The mechanical engine power of the Unimog is 160 kW and it achieves a speed of 90 km h on roads and 50 km h on rails It needs a leveled area of 5 m length for a rail road changeover Maintenance editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Old Montreal Metro maintenance tractorRolling stock maintenance edit Self propelled maintenance vehicles for maintenance of the track and for shunting wagons are much more convenient to use if they can transfer to the road to reposition or otherwise get out of the way Because relatively light loads are involved the problems plaguing the Road Transferable Locomotive are avoided An example would be a forklift truck fitted with railway wheels and a coupling with which to shunt a wagon or two In Belgium the company UCA bvba has been constructing road rail vehicles since 1981 UCA started with converting WF trac and MB trac for rail traction uses They built rail car movers shunting locotractors and other road rail vehicles Best known is the UCA TRAC based on the chassis of a JCB Load All UCA TRAC B and Fastrac UCA TRAC F The UCA TRAC provides traction through its rubber wheels citation needed Safety issues editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp MAN heavy technical assistance shunting vehicle truck with a crane and drawbar for trams nbsp This road rail truck s forward rail wheels lift its forward road wheels up off the track leaving only the two inner back wheels on the rails Road rail vehicles particularly those used for inspection purposes have been involved in a number of serious incidents including deaths There has been ongoing discussion clarification needed regarding maintenance and inspection standards including load and load distribution to minimise the risk of failures Factors leading to derailment include failed locking equipment wheel failure damaged rail wheel support systems inappropriate tires and uneven or overloading issues citation needed In the UK technical requirements for road rail vehicles are the subject of a Rail Industry Standard RIS 1530 PLT In Australia the Rail Industry Safety and Standards Board RISSB is working with manufacturers and operators to produce an Australian standard to which road rail vehicles must comply When operating in road going mode drivers have to remember that the dynamics of the vehicle will be changed due to the increased weight at the front and rear of the chassis Some manufacturers have developed systems that allow the rail wheels to be stored almost entirely inside the original bodywork thus moving the centre of mass closer to the road axles This greatly improves the on road driving performance of the vehicle See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Road rail vehicles Alden staRRcar Cater MetroTrolley Jenny Railcar Railcar mover Railroad speeder Mini Moke Railway MokesNotes edit Japan road rail midi buses on a rural railway Railway Gazette International Retrieved 6 January 2022 SRS Rail System International Ltd Railway News Retrieved 6 January 2022 Beaujot Ralf 3 May 2007 Wagon brake system in a two way vehicle Retrieved 6 January 2022 Rail Insider Technology update Hi rail equipment Information For Rail Career Professionals From Progressive Railroading Magazine Progressive Railroading Retrieved 6 January 2022 The Paragraph reports on our new rail and road vehicle SLW Retrieved 6 January 2022 a b Qin Bonan Zeng Riya Li Xiaoman Yang Jue 3 March 2021 Design and Performance Analysis of the Hydropneumatic Suspension System for a Novel Road Rail Vehicle Applied Sciences 11 5 2221 doi 10 3390 app11052221 New Haulage System for Sutherlandshire Northern Ensign and Weekly Gazette 19 July 1922 p 7 At Wembley Road Rail Tractors Illustrated London News 19 January 1924 p 19 Roadrails Limited The Scotsman 31 May 1923 p 4 Kolomiet s Maksim Kolomiec Maksim 2007 Broni a na kolesakh istorii a sovetskogo broneavtomobili a 1925 1945 Moscow I A uza ISBN 978 5 699 21870 7 Kinnear Jim 2000 Russian armoured cars 1930 2000 PDF Darlington Maryland Darlington Productions ISBN 1 892848 05 8 Retrieved 14 January 2022 Sumida M 2593 Type 91 www militaryfactory com Retrieved 14 January 2022 Taki s Imperial Japanese Army Type 91 Armored Railroad Car Zaloga Steven J 20 July 2011 Armored Trains Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 84908 958 6 Retrieved 14 January 2022 So Ki www3 plala or jp Retrieved 14 January 2022 Zaloga Steven J 20 July 2011 Armored Trains Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 84908 958 6 Retrieved 23 January 2022 Armored carrier BTR 40A on railway Kubinka tank museum Retrieved 23 January 2022 Schindler Mattis 2009 Obusse in Deutschland Bd 1 Berlin Brandenburg Mecklenburg Vorpommern Schleswig Holstein Hamburg Bremen Niedersachsen Sachsen Anhalt Thuringen Sachsen fruhere deutsche Ostgebiete Nordhorn ISBN 978 3 933613 34 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The LMS Ro Railer www warwickshirerailways com Retrieved 6 January 2022 Multiple sources For Both Road and Rail The Evans Auto Railer www macsmotorcitygarage com 29 February 2020 Retrieved 6 January 2022 Autorailers and the W amp OD FOWOD Archived from the original on 27 March 2015 Retrieved 6 January 2022 Evans Auto Railer dual purpose transportation units Hagley Digital Archives Retrieved 23 January 2022 Clive Lamming 2006 Trains de Legende Les Reseaux francais et la Naissance de la SNCF 1938 1950 in German p 105 ISBN 2 8302 2147 8 Red Arrow Lines Railbus Experiments 1967 1968 P amp W and Media Trolley Lines YouTube Retrieved 6 January 2022 Sadowski David 2 December 2016 Raymond Loewy The Trolley Dodger Retrieved 6 January 2022 a b c d Lucas rail bus gains a new lease of life Reed Business Information August 1983 Retrieved 6 January 2022 編集長敬白アーカイブ 鉄道ホビダス rail hobidas com Japan Railway amp Transport Review No 51 pp 28 39 Retrieved 25 August 2020 Japan to get world s 1st operational bus train dual mode vehicle Kyodo News Retrieved 12 February 2022 Albin Jonathan Ben M 2017 Abilene and Smoky Valley Railroad Clio Your Guide to History Retrieved 24 February 2022 Rail Plan 2005 2006 PDF Kansas Department of Transportation Retrieved 24 February 2022 online heise Mit Flexy vor die Haustur SNCF testet Mini Zug in Frankreich heise online in German Retrieved 22 April 2022 Yellow Window Supports SNCF s Innovations Serving Tomorrow s Mobility Railway News 28 February 2022 Retrieved 22 April 2022 Chevrolet Leader News Vol 1 No 2 Handy Jam Organization Free Download amp Streaming Internet Archive Retrieved 23 July 2014 Aries Hyrail Permaquip Continental Railworks Vollert develops VLEX road rail shunting robot Railway Gazette International Retrieved 11 June 2022 2 Wege Robot VLEX fur Schiene und Strasse PDF Retrieved 11 June 2022 Mercedes Benz Presents the Unimog at InnoTrans 2018 The Unimog Road Railer Efficient on Road and Rail Targeted News Service 2018 Retrieved 23 January 2022 External links edit1935 Evans Auto Railer Jackson MI 2022 FLEXI concept Brekina Schi stra bus Dual Mode bus VLEX Road rail shunting robot Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Road rail vehicle amp oldid 1217724091 Road rail buses, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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