0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Lost in all this seems to be the question as to why a railroad would ever go from a 2% downhill to a 2% uphill grade without a flat section inbetween; that's just asking for trouble and broken knuckles In the real world, crossing a valley or a terrain depression would involve some kind of drainage structure at the bottom of the grade, a bridge or a fill with a culvert, and those would typically not be built on vertical curves with a 4% delta. Just sayin'...Otto K.
Of course the area I'm trackplanning for is a behind the scenes staging area. Fair point for discussion though... Is there any important reason I need a flat section in the middle? For the moment I'm persuaded by CNR5529's argument.
Couldn't agree more Randy. The theory is just for fun (and some rough guidance). There is no substitute for building and testing.I also agree that a continuous curve between the up and down grades should be fine.
There's an awful lot of theory here and not a lot of practice....