Railway locomotives increased in weight from less than 10 tons in 1825 to more than 100 tons by the 1930s. Originally loading on bridges was assumed as an average weight per unit length ignoring axle concentration and generous factors of safety were used to compensate for the absence of any dynamic allowance. After the Dee Bridge collapse of 1847 Board of Trade rules were imposed. The comparatively few bridge failures under train loading are summarised. After several failures of flawed cast-iron girders these were gradually replaced after 1891. There was no rigorous consideration of dynamic effects until the 1900s. Civil engineers had been rejecting heavier new locomotives without comparing hammer blow characteristics. Dynamic effects were eventually investigated for the Bridge Stress Committee Report of 1928. With the elimination of steam traction, loading as developed for Europe was introduced and is now adopted in the Eurocodes. Comparisons are made between early and modern loadings taking account of the effect of increasing speeds.
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December 2014
Research Article|
August 26 2013
Train loading on bridges since Stephenson's Rocket Available to Purchase
Alan C G. Hayward, FREng, CEng, FICE, FIStructE
Alan C G. Hayward, FREng, CEng, FICE, FIStructE
Consultant, Cass Hayward LLP, Chepstow, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
May 18 2011
Accepted:
July 15 2011
Online ISSN: 1751-7664
Print ISSN: 1478-4637
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2014
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Bridge Engineering (2014) 167 (4): 326–337.
Article history
Received:
May 18 2011
Accepted:
July 15 2011
Citation
Hayward ACG (2014), "Train loading on bridges since Stephenson's Rocket". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Bridge Engineering, Vol. 167 No. 4 pp. 326–337, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/bren.11.00029
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