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List of wind-related railway accidents
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High winds can blow railway trains off tracks and cause accidents.
Dangers of high winds
High winds can cause problems in a number of ways:
- blow trains off the tracks
- blow trains or wagons along the tracks and cause collisions
- cause cargo to blow off trains which can damage objects outside the railway or which other trains can collide with
- cause pantographs and overhead wiring to tangle
- cause trees and other objects to fall onto the railway.
Preventative measures
Risks from high winds can be reduced by:
- wind fences akin to snow sheds
- lower profile of carriages
- lowered centre of gravity of vehicles
- reduction in train speed or cancellation, at high winds
- a wider rail gauge
- improve overhead wiring with:
- regulated tension rather than fixed terminations
- shorter catenary spans
- solid conductors
By country
Australia
- 1928 – 47 wagons blown along line at Tocumwal
- 1931 – Kandos – wind blows level crossing gates closed in front of motor-cyclist
- 1943 – Hobart, Tasmania; Concern that wind will blow over doubledeck trams on gauge if top deck enclosed.
- 2010 – Marla, South Australia; Small tornado blows over train.
Austria
- 1910 – Trieste (now in Italy) – train blown down embankment.
China
- Lanxin High-Speed Railway#Wind shed risk
- February 28, 2007 – Wind blows 10 passenger rail cars off the track near Turpan, China.
Denmark
- Great Belt Bridge rail accident. On 2 January 2019 a DSB express passenger train is hit by a semi-trailer from a passing cargo train on the western bridge of the Great Belt Fixed Link during Storm Alfrida, killing eight people and injuring 16.
Germany
- Rügen narrow-gauge railway, 20 October 1936: derailment of a train, five injured
India
- One reason for choosing broad gauge in India for greater stability in high winds.
Ireland
- On the night of 30 January 1925, strong winds derailed carriages of a train crossing the Owencarrow Viaduct of the gauge Londonderry and Lough Swilly Railway.
Japan
- Inaho
- Amarube Viaduct
- 1895 Gale blows train into sea
New Zealand
- Rimutaka Incline railway accident
Norway
- Makrellbekken (station)#Wind related accident – blowing snow disoriented a tractor driver who collided with a train
South Africa
- Wind tangles overhead wiring in Cape Town, 2012.
Switzerland
- In 1996, one train from the Wengernalp Railway derailed in Bernese Oberland with four people injured.
- On 19 January 2007, one train derailed near Wasserausen.
- In 2018, one train from the Montreux–Lenk im Simmental line derailed in the Simmental region, injuring eight people.
- On 31 March 2023, two trains derailed in the Canton of Bern due to strong winds, with fifteen people injured.
United Kingdom
- Tay Bridge disaster 1879
- Chelford rail accident 1894 – during shunting
- De-wirements on the East Coast Main Line
- Leven Viaduct, Cumbria 27 February 1903
- Carrbridge 1914 – train derailed due to torrent caused by storm
- Cheddington 2008 – two containers blown off train – design of "spigots" criticised.
- Moston 2015 – out of gauge train hits platform, throwing stones onto other track.
- Scout Green 2015 – empty 30-foot ISA container blown off train
United States
- On 24 April 1883, 2 cars of a passenger train were blown from the narrow-gauge Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad tracks near Como, Colorado, with only minor injuries.
- Around 6:15pm, 6 May 1876, a passenger train traveling south on the Illinois Central Railroad at about 23 miles per hour was derailed during a storm just south of Neoga, Illinois. Numerous minor injuries were reported.
- Around 7am, 23 Feb. 1884, 2 cars were blown off the narrow-gauge tracks of the Colorado Central Railroad near Georgetown, Colorado.
- Around 2pm, 4 February 1885, the wind overturned an entire 3-car Colorado Central Railroad train just east of Georgetown, Colorado. The express train had slowed to 8 miles per hour because of the wind. 18 out of 20 passengers were injured.
- At 3:30pm, 1 April 1892, a narrow-gauge passenger train of the Burlington and Northwestern Railway was blown off the tracks while running at full speed 1 mile east of Butler, a station between Fremont, Iowa and Hedrick, Iowa.; 4 were seriously injured, a dozen more suffered minor injuries. Note that the location places this on the Burlington and Western Railway tracks.
- On 2 September 1911, tram services in Charleston, South Carolina, were suspended due to winds.
- On 28 June 1986, a derecho derailed 18 piggyback cars on the Kate Shelley High Bridge over the Des Moines River in Iowa.
- On 29 June 1998, the Corn Belt Derecho blew several double stack and piggyback cars off the Iowa Interstate Railroad bridge across the Iowa River.
- A 2008 tornado in Northern Illinois derailed a Union Pacific train. Dramatic footage of the event was captured by a camera mounted on the train.
- On 27 April 2015, a severe storm knocked several double stack cars off the track as a train crossed the Huey P. Long Bridge, New Orleans, Louisiana, with no injuries. The accident was captured by a WGNO News Team dashcam.
- On 13 March 2019, mid-day winds of around 80 mph derailed the rear 26 cars of a double stack train on the Union Pacific high steel trestle over the Canadian River south of Logan, New Mexico.
One reason for choosing broad gauge (17% wider than standard gauge) for BART was the greater stability in high winds and perhaps earthquakes.
Factors
- Lightweight trains
- Narrow gauge
- Aspects of the terrain
- Tunnels
References
References
- C. Proppe, C. Wetzel. (2007). "IUTAM Symposium on Dynamics and Control of Nonlinear Systems with Uncertainty". Springer.
- (1982). "Schmalspurbahn-Archiv". Transpress.
- (8 October 1928). "SEVERE WINDSTORM.". The Argus.
- (27 August 1931). "LEVEL CROSSING ACCIDENT.". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- "Tornado derails outback freight train".
- (4 April 1910). "FATAL RAILWAY ACCIDENT.". [[Northern Star (Australian newspaper).
- (2 January 2019). "Six dead in train crash on Denmark's Great Belt Fixed Link". The Local DK.
- (21 October 1936). "GALE DERAILS TRAIN.". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- (21 October 1936). "TRAIN DERAILED.". [[The Examiner (Tasmania).
- (31 July 1895). "RAILWAY ACCIDENT.". [[Zeehan and Dundas Herald]].
- "WIND STALLS CAPE TRAINS | Railways Africa".
- (April 2023). "En Suisse, des trains ont déjà déraillé à cause du vent".
- (April 2023). "Two Swiss trains derail in strong winds, several injured - SWI swissinfo.ch".
- [[The Railway Magazine]] April 2015, p12
- Blown from the Track, [https://books.google.com/books?id=sqwxAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA285 Railroad Gazette], 4 April 1883; pages 285-286. Reprinted from the 25 Apr. 'Denver Tribune'.
- Thrown off the Track, [https://www.loc.gov/resource/sn84031492/1876-05-08/ed-1/?sp=5&r=0.02,0.451,0.487,0.299,0 Chicago Daily Tribune], 8 May 1876, page 5. (Retrieved via Library of Congress Chronicling American archive).
- Two Cars Blown Off the Track, [https://www.nytimes.com/1884/02/24/archives/two-cars-blown-off-the-track.html New York Times], 24 Feb. 1884.
- Train Wreck at Georgetown, 4 February 1885, [https://rmrhs.org/newsletters/2017-01-RMRHS-newsletter.pdf Rocky Mountain Railroad Heritage Society Newsletter, Vol. 3], No. 9 (Winter, 2017); page 6. (reprinted from the Denver Tribune Republican, 5 Feb. 1885.)
- [http://www.narrowgauge.org/images/tkcok/m00314.jpg Derailed in a Hurricane at Georgetown], 4 Feb. 1885, photo in the [http://www.narrowgauge.org/ngc/html/excursion6/excursion6-colorado-central-rr.html Ted Kierscey Collection], retrieved Feb 2021.
- Exhibit No. 5. Casualties, 1891-'92, [https://books.google.com/books?id=uOcgAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA845 Annual Report of the Postmaster General of the United States for the Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 1892], GPO, 1892; page 845. Gives time and location.
- Train Blown Over, [https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90059522/1892-04-02/ed-1/seq-1/ St. Paul daily globe] (Saint Paul, Minn.), 2 April 1892; page 1. Historic American Newspaper collection, Library of Congress.
- Swept by Fearful Winds, [https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026853/1892-04-20/ed-1/seq-2/ The Abbeville press and banner] (Abbeville, S.C.), 20 April 1892; page 2. Historic American Newspaper collection, Library of Congress.
- (24 May 1892). "NEWS BY MAIL.". [[The Brisbane Courier]].
- (2 September 1911). "AMERICAN WIND STORM.". [[The Northern Times]].
- [https://www.spc.noaa.gov/misc/AbtDerechos/casepages/jul28-291986page.htm July 28-29 1986 Derecho "The Supercell Transition Derecho"], part of the NOAA [https://www.spc.noaa.gov/misc/AbtDerechos/derechofacts.htm About Derechos] web site, retrieved Aug. 2020.
- [https://www.thegazette.com/subject/life/people-and-places/archive-photos-june-1998-derecho-hits-the-iowa-city-area-20180629 Archive photos: June 1998 derecho hits the Iowa City area], The Cedar Rapids Gazette, retrieved Aug. 2020.
- "Twisters hit Illinois and Wisconsin {{!".
- "TRAIN Vs. TORNADO - BEST PART!!!!!".
- Carlie Kollath Wells. (27 April 2015). "Train cars blown off tracks on Huey P. Long Bridge, FOX 8 reports". The Times.
- Kyle Cheromcha, Bomb Cyclone Winds Blow Freight Train Off Railroad Bridge in New Mexico, [https://www.thedrive.com/news/26941/bomb-cyclone-winds-blow-freight-train-off-railroad-bridge-in-new-mexico The Drive], 14 March 2019
- (13 August 2009). "The deep-lodged problems with the BART system".
- (6 January 2010). "Crossing the Bay Again – but Not Necessarily with BART".
- "BECCA Wiki : Rail vehicle overturning".
- "CFD-aided tenability assessment of railway tunnel train fire scenarios".
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