Might Be The End Of The Rhtt?

Discussion in 'Off Topic' started by ARuscoe, Oct 4, 2021.

  1. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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  2. CK95

    CK95 Well-Known Member

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    More than likely not, if this system needs any sort of maintenance then it’ll be out of the picture.

    Also consider how long the dry ice will last, and how regularly it’ll need to be applied, the current way of dealing with the issue will probably remain more cost effective, and more practical over all.
     
  3. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    From my understanding it's dry ice and hot air, so no need for high pressure equipment or tanks of water, shot and tack... Much more simple system than the current RHTT

    Also, if it fits on a sprinter it should fit on just about all locos. Add a sensor that detects leaf mulch on the railhead and fit it to every passenger unit. The rails can be treated any time they're required

    The current way involves maintaining a fleet of the high pressure systems that only get used for two or three months of the year (so stored otherwise) and a bunch of locos to haul them... Or those specialist units which again don't have much to do outside of Autumn
     
  4. CK95

    CK95 Well-Known Member

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    The thing is though, that fleet will still have to be maintained and kept in reserve, track inspections will also still need to be carried to make sure the rails are actually cleared, but now the job is separated into multiple parts which will potentially only end up requiring the job being scheduled in anyway.

    The most unlikely part about the whole thing however is having TOC’s doing their own track maintenance, even if this new method does show to be better it’s unlikely that it would be utilised by passenger services, as opposed to the current OTM.
     
  5. -PjM-

    -PjM- Well-Known Member

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    It certainly seems like a promising idea working in many ways much like a sander does now. So could probably be retro fitted onto many trains.



    Whether it'll fully replace the RHTTs I'm not sure, they might have their use in certain areas. I'd miss the one that's based at my local depot.

    It's certainly cleaner though!
    Screenshot_2021-10-05-10-58-59-143.jpeg
     
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  6. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    Engineering and track maintenance trains run anyway, this only affects the leaf mulch issue

    Lest we forget, TOCs are essentially being phased out with GBR taking over, so that will matter less anyway
     
  7. CK95

    CK95 Well-Known Member

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    Yes, and Implying that TOC ran 150’s will replace the use of RHTT’s is a bold claim, even if they do, they’ll still need all of that equipment in reserve.

    The TOC’s will still be there, just under the disguise of one livery *if* GBR even gets that far.
     
  8. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    It's being trialled on a 150... No reason to think the system (if successful) couldn't be fitted to other trains
     
  9. CK95

    CK95 Well-Known Member

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    Regardless of it being a 150 or 800 the point remains the same, TOC’s simply won’t accept the liability of track maintenance.
     
  10. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    They already do in some ways and don't see how this is any different especially if it's made part of the franchise agreement, or if their track access costs are reduced as an offset
     
  11. CK95

    CK95 Well-Known Member

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    It’s different simply because of the importance of the task, the simple fact is that the TOC’s don’t have the resources to facilitate a job like this, even within Network Rail it’s a specialised task.

    Even if a TOC became responsible for clearing the issue, Network Rail still remain responsible for the inspections before and after, and more than likely any further clearance needed, the only thing that attaching equipment to Passenger units accomplishes is adding more overheads, because what’s already in place will have to remain in place, if for no other reason, as a back up.
     
  12. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    Quote from the piece linked in the OP
    "Under the new method, pellets of dry ice are fired in a stream of air, making leaves frozen and brittle. The dry ice then quickly turns back into gas, causing it to expand and destroy the leaves."
    So the specialised bit here would be loading the dry ice, as in a lot less of an issue than the current system
     
  13. -PjM-

    -PjM- Well-Known Member

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    I'm not sure about its ability to constantly clean tracks everywhere it goes, because I'd think that would consume a lot of dried ice - which would require more storage. But if proved successful the system would make a good safety feature when fitted to those modern high speed trains that have wheel slip and lockup sensors. It could perhaps then be activated automatically (if enabled) to help prevent these autumn issues. The RHTTs with their large tanks could then continue to squirt on the more problematic routes and where where trains aren't fitted.

    I think there's room for both systems. The more weapons in the arsenal for the fight against the dreaded 'leaves on the line' the better.


    On a slightly different topic but here's some testing of a new smart weed killing train. Advances are always being made.
     
  14. xi haoyu china

    xi haoyu china Active Member

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  15. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    Google it
     
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  16. xi haoyu china

    xi haoyu china Active Member

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    What is google? More new route?

    Link you sent say it is not available
     
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  17. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    Google is a search engine (probably banned in China but if you can get to this page then you can likely get to google also)
    It allows you to put in search terms (such as "what does RHTT mean") and it will give you webpages relevant to t answer, or in many cases, the answer itself
    It's how you can find things out for yourself about things that you don't already know
     
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  18. xi haoyu china

    xi haoyu china Active Member

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    Baidu is much better
     
  19. StokesJH

    StokesJH Active Member

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    This really makes my day :)

    Google is a search engine. But I assume it is not accessible in China.
     
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  20. xi haoyu china

    xi haoyu china Active Member

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    Because China know what is correct and ban all spy apps.
     
  21. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    Back to the geopolitical statements... I really would stay away from those
     
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  22. StokesJH

    StokesJH Active Member

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    I am tempted to start a discussion about the role of China in the world, but this forum is not the place. I applaud your love for your country, but some critical thinking wouldn’t hurt. Baidu is in no way better than google.
     
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  23. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    Oh, and just checked Baidu, it also lists what RHTT is
     
  24. ARuscoe

    ARuscoe Well-Known Member

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    search "what is rhtt uk railways"
     
  25. xi haoyu china

    xi haoyu china Active Member

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    ok
     
  26. 43050

    43050 Well-Known Member

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    Don’t the RHTT MPVs also perform other tasks such as weedkilling?
     
  27. trainsimplayer

    trainsimplayer Well-Known Member

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    A very interesting change. However I doubt getting rid of leaves will help Northern reduce Delays :D

    Jk, I think it could be a good change to make provided it works.

    Let's do everyone a favour and not get into (geo)political statements.

    In response, Google is hardly spyware, it's one of (probably the) main search engines in the Western World.
     
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