Ardglen Tunnel

Ardglen Tunnel

The Ardglen Tunnel is a summit tunnel on the Main North railway in New South Wales, Australia, between Newcastle and Werris Creek. It crosses under the Liverpool Range near its east end below Nowland Pass (otherwise known as Murrurundi Gap), the crossing used by the New England Highway.

It is approximately 500 m long, and is approached on either side by long 10 km climbs of gradients at the ruling grade on 1 in 40 (2.5%). The tunnel is single tracked, which combined with the steep grades make this section a bottleneck.

Stations

The stations on either side are:

* Murrurundi — medium length crossing loop and start of ruling grades.
* Padua — closed short crossing loop on ruling gradient
* Ardglen Tunnel — summit
* Ardglen — medium length crossing loop and railway station
* Kankool — short crossing loop on ruling gradient
* Willow Tree — medium length crossing loop and railway station and end of ruling grades.

Rathole

Because the Arglen tunnel is at the summit of ruling grades, and because of its narrow profile, the tunnel was a rathole tunnel during steam days. The larger locomotives such as the 60-class garratt where either prohibited or limited in load.

Proposed deviations

To cope with considerable increased coal traffic from north of the tunnel, various deviations are proposed. These deviations can either keep the existing summit tunnel, or bore a much longer tunnel at a lower elevation. The deviations that keep the existing tunnel increase the length of the line so as to ease the gradient to 1 in 80 which is the ruling gradient on the rest of the line to the port. The existing line would be retained for empty trains going the other way, so forming double track.

References

External links

* [http://www.railpage.com.au/f-p918248.htm 72 wagon coal train trial]
* [http://wikimapia.org/1655020/ Ardglen quarry and siding map]
* [http://home.iprimus.com.au/scuttlesim/Ardglen/ardglen.html Virtual route for Microsoft Train Simulator]
* [http://www.fallingrain.com/world/AS/2/Murrurundi.html FallingRain Map - elevation = 544 m]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Rathole tunnel — Rathole tunnels are railway tunnels where fumes from locomotives make passage through the tunnel unpleasantFact|date=February 2007. OverviewRathole tunnels are characterized by being long, steeply graded, narrow bores (often with single tracks).… …   Wikipedia

  • Main North railway line, New South Wales — For other railways called Main North Line, see Main North Line. For other railways called Great Northern, see Great Northern Railway. [v · d · …   Wikipedia

  • Ruling gradient — The ruling gradient (or ruling grade) of a section of railway line is the steepest section of that line. The ruling gradient is important in assigning locomotives to trains, as the locomotives must have sufficient power to pull the train over the …   Wikipedia

  • Great Dividing Range — Coordinates: 25°00′S 147°00′E / 25°S 147°E / 25; 147 …   Wikipedia

  • Liverpool Range — The Liverpool Range is a mountain range and a lava field province in New South Wales, Australia.The Liverpool Range starts from the volcanic plateau known as the Barrington Tops and runs for about 100 km westwards, forming the northern boundary… …   Wikipedia

  • Nowlands Gap — on the Liverpool Range, NSW Nowlands Gap, also known as Nowlands Pass and Murrurundi Gap, is a pass over the Liverpool Range in central NSW Australia. William Nowland discovered Nowlands Gap north of Murrurundi in 1827. His route eventually… …   Wikipedia

  • Bank engine — A bank engine (United Kingdom/Australia) (colloquially a banker) or helper engine or pusher engine (North America) is a railway locomotive that temporarily assists a train that requires additional power or traction to climb a grade (or bank ).… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”