rbattelle
TDR MEMBER
After visiting a railroad museum recently, I had the occasion of a 10-hour car trip to ponder various railway-related trivia.
One of the things I got to thinking about was the broad gauge railway. Here and in the UK (and in most of the world) we run on the 4' 8. 5" gauge established by George Stevenson back in the early 1800s. Why 4' 8. 5"? Because that happened to be the width Stevenson used on his first coal mine rail, and he simply stuck with it. There is no engineering significance to the value. When locomotives were as small as "Tom Thumb", 4' 8. 5" was plenty.
Later (in the 1830s and 40s), Mr. I. K. Brunel built the Great Western Railway, which provided service primarily between Bristol and London. Brunel's gauge was 7' 0. 25", based on a rigorous series of calculations and experimentation that indicated this would be "the best".
In the end, Stevenson's gauge won simply on the basis of existing trackage. The 7' gauge seems to have been better - bigger locomotives (more power), smoother running, more stability.
Imagine how much less cramped passenger trains would be at 7'. Imagine how much more power could be achieved (an end to multiple-locomotive consists?).
Would it be practical to start a new railway company today with 7' gauge? Almost certainly not, but I can't help but wonder if it could be a success if sufficient investment in equipment were made to put the cost per ton-mile extremely low. I mean below standard gauge rail and far below truck freight.
Perhaps a better question is: if the broad gauge had not been legislated out of existence and had grown in direct open competition to the standard gauge, would it have eventually become the standard, with 4' 8. 5" trackage being either relegated to minor routes or eliminated altogether?
Put more concisely, would a broad gauge railway be more economical (in terms of cost per ton-mile) today than standard gauge railways are? If it were, what effect would this have on the US commercial transportation network?
I was just wondering if anyone else had any thoughts on the matter.
Ryan
One of the things I got to thinking about was the broad gauge railway. Here and in the UK (and in most of the world) we run on the 4' 8. 5" gauge established by George Stevenson back in the early 1800s. Why 4' 8. 5"? Because that happened to be the width Stevenson used on his first coal mine rail, and he simply stuck with it. There is no engineering significance to the value. When locomotives were as small as "Tom Thumb", 4' 8. 5" was plenty.
Later (in the 1830s and 40s), Mr. I. K. Brunel built the Great Western Railway, which provided service primarily between Bristol and London. Brunel's gauge was 7' 0. 25", based on a rigorous series of calculations and experimentation that indicated this would be "the best".
In the end, Stevenson's gauge won simply on the basis of existing trackage. The 7' gauge seems to have been better - bigger locomotives (more power), smoother running, more stability.
Imagine how much less cramped passenger trains would be at 7'. Imagine how much more power could be achieved (an end to multiple-locomotive consists?).
Would it be practical to start a new railway company today with 7' gauge? Almost certainly not, but I can't help but wonder if it could be a success if sufficient investment in equipment were made to put the cost per ton-mile extremely low. I mean below standard gauge rail and far below truck freight.
Perhaps a better question is: if the broad gauge had not been legislated out of existence and had grown in direct open competition to the standard gauge, would it have eventually become the standard, with 4' 8. 5" trackage being either relegated to minor routes or eliminated altogether?
Put more concisely, would a broad gauge railway be more economical (in terms of cost per ton-mile) today than standard gauge railways are? If it were, what effect would this have on the US commercial transportation network?
I was just wondering if anyone else had any thoughts on the matter.
Ryan
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