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INFRASET AND TRANSNET DEVELOP SECOND-GENERATION TRANSITION BEAM | Click HERE to go back to projects

A second-generation transition beam has been designed and developed by Transnet Freight Rail (TFR) and Infraset Railway Products. Transition beams smooth out the difference in resilience between normal ballast-mounted rail track and the concrete-mounted track found in tunnels.

The new beam represents a substantial advance over its first-generation counterpart, jointly developed by TRF and Infraset for the Richards Bay coal line nine years ago, in that it is much easier to produce and simpler to install. Two beams (four in all) have been placed at each entrance to the only tunnel on the Saldanha/Sishen ore (Orex) line, the northern end being situated at Elands Bay on the West Cape coast.

Transition beams comprise individual sleepers which are post-tensioned  to form a single ladder-shaped beam. Rails are secured to the beams with Pandrol fastenings. Because they rest on ballast, the beams provide intermediate resilience, approximately 50% less than normal ballast-mounted track and 50% greater than the concrete-mounted track found in tunnels.

Josia Meyer, senior engineer track technology at TFR, says the net effect of stepping resilience up or down – depending on the direction of the train - is that the frequency of maintenance required at tunnel entrances is reduced from three times to once annually. This in turn minimises line closures and improves overall productivity.

“Track assemblies at tunnel entrances, which are not protected by transition beams, are less able to withstand the additional vertical and horizontal forces generated by trains as they move from concrete-mounted to ballast-mounted track, and vice versa. These additional forces accelerate ballast deterioration by a factor of three – hence the higher maintenance requirement,” says Meyer.

Given that TFR intends increasing freight volumes on the line from the current 45 million tons to 60 000 million tons a year, any avoidance of line closures has a direct impact on tonnages hauled.

Attie Coetzee, civil maintenance manager on the Orex line, says the line carries some of the longest production trains in the world.

“These stretch to over 10km and comprise up to 342 wagons and 10 diesel locomotives each. The Orex line is undergoing continual improvements. For example, 10 years ago its maximum carrying capacity was only 18 million tons,” said Coetzee.

Sizwe Mkhize, product manager of Infraset Railway Products, says the joint development of a local transition beam first began in 1999 when Transnet decided to replace a Japanse beam, which precluded tamping of the ballast situated immediately beneath it.

“This first-generation replacement beam proved successful in reducing the amount of maintenance required on the coal line and the improvements now incorporated in the second- generation beam were installation and production driven,” concluded Mkhize.

Josia Meyer +27 11 773 6355
Sizwe Mkhize +27 11 813 2340
David Beer +27 11 478-0239 or  + 27 (0) 82-880-6726

The entrance/exit of the tunnel on the Saldanha/Sishen ore line at Elands Bay prior to the installation of transition beams. The beams have been installed to smooth out the difference in resilience between normal ballast-mounted rail track and the concrete-mounted track found in tunnels

A transition beam is offloaded close to the entrance of the Saldanha/Sishen ore line tunnel at Elands Bay, where it was installed.

A few of the members of the technical team who were involved in the design, construction and installation of the second generation transition beams pose on one of the beams at Elands Bay. The are: Don Nellmapius (standing left), technical executive, Pandrol SA; Raymond Barnfather, factory manager of Infraset Brakpan; Chris van der Merwe, sales executive of Infraset Railway Products; of Transnet Freight Rail; Hennie Breedt (seated left), manufacturing executive, Infraset Railway Products; and Sizwe Mkhize, sales manager, Infraset Railway Products. Josia Meyer and other members of the Transnet Track Technology team involved in the project were not available for this photograph.

An installed transition beam at the entrance/exit to the tunnel on the Saldanha/Sishen ore line at Elands Bay.