DocumentCode
2778298
Title
Vehicle reactions versus track geometry
Author
Esveld, Coenraad
fYear
1990
fDate
17-19 Apr 1990
Firstpage
171
Lastpage
174
Abstract
For assessment purposes the total range of relevant wavelengths for differential settlements is split up into a number of wavebands in accordance with vehicle response characteristics to deformations in the track geometry and the potential of maintenance machines to correct the track geometry. The measurement signals produced by recording cars are analyzed by calculating the standard deviation per waveband and detecting the exceedence of particular threshold levels. The major problem in analyzing and interpreting these signals is how the results of individual signals should be combined to one overall result. The best practical solution is to normalize the standard deviations and take the largest one as the decisive one. This is purely an empirical approach in which a theoretical basis is lacking. The one solution to combining the different geometrical components is via vehicle response. This approach is discussed
Keywords
railways; spatial variables measurement; deformations; maintenance machines; measurement signals; recording cars; standard deviations; track geometry; vehicle reactions; vehicle response characteristics; Acceleration; Automotive engineering; Geometry; Measurement standards; Safety; Signal analysis; Signal design; Stability criteria; Stress; Vehicle dynamics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Railroad Conference, 1990., Technical Papers Presented at the 1990 ASME/IEEE Joint
Conference_Location
Chicago, IL
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RRCON.1990.171676
Filename
171676
Link To Document