Re: Indian Railways Thread (Dec 2015)
Posted: 05 Mar 2019 23:13
Stacked Containers finally:
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
https://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/
source please.rajkumar wrote:Apparently the Railway Board has placed an order for 44 Train 18 sets with ICF.
Second Train 18 to be rolled out this month; to sport more 'Make in India' components than first one
Almost 130 of these engine-less, semi-high speed trains - India's fastest currently - are reportedly on anvil over the next few years
Railway Minister Piyush Goyal had announced last month that the newly-launched superfast Vande Bharat Express, also known as Train 18, will soon run on three new routes, Bangalore-Mangalore, Mangalore-Hyderabad and Chennai-Mangalore.
The latest buzz is that the upcoming trainsets will boast more local components, giving a boost to the Modi government's Make in India initiative. Almost 130 of these engine-less, semi-high speed trains - India's fastest currently - are reportedly on anvil over the next few years.
In the case of the first Train 18, which rolled out of the Chennai-based Integral Coach Factory (ICF) in 2018, although the Railways tried to tap its existing Indian vendor base to keep costs low, it wasn't completely successful.
A few components, the glass windows for one, had to be imported as the Indian vendors wanted higher and assured volumes to provide better quality products, The Hindu Business Line reported.
It's noteworthy that the ICF has already been given the order to produce 44 more Train 18 sets.
Make in India: Proud moment! How Indian Railways beat China to become world's largest coach manufacturer
Sudhanshu Mani, former GM of the ICF who oversaw the production of Vande Bharat Express, told ZeeBiz.com that ICF has a fantastic team and it only needed to harness the enthusiasm of the team to achieve the record.
Neeraj Kumar Desai, the owner of the firm that conducted the audit of the foot overbridge near the landmark Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus (CSMT) railway station, was produced before Mumbai's Esplanade Court on Tuesday and sent to police custody till 25 March.
Desai was arrested on Monday in connection with last week's foot over bridge collapse, that left six people dead and over 30 injured.
Police initially booked officials of the Mumbai civic body, which were responsible for its maintenance, and the Central Railway (CR) under section 304-A (Causing death by negligence) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), but rescinded the move later.
Sridhar K wrote:Background on the bogies of T18 by Sudhanshu Mani in his blog. Also covers transformers and power
http://anindecisiveindian.blogspot.com/?m=1#
Gurus, which company Sri Mani is referring here ??Magical work has been done by an Indian company based in Hyderabad in the field of 3-phase propulsion system. This company has always believed in strong R&D work and has deployed a large group of very competent engineers for years to develop their products in the train propulsion and allied areas. Their products have proved to be more effective and reliable as compared to the systems offered by established multi-nationals in the country; the price of the propulsion system for locomotives and self-propelled vehicles has also come down over the years thanks to their presence. Fortunately, they had bagged the order for the propulsion system, including traction motors, and its complicated controls and that too through an open bidding process.
Thanks. There are some additional comments on that article. Brereton the engineer who designed the bridge(Prince Albert viaduct) over the River Tawa, went to California after his stay in India. There he designed the irrigation system which provides the water that makes California such a rich producer of vegetables and fruit. He refused to be the commissioner of this irrigation system. The tale of John Fernandez that the article refers to, is found in a compilation of Indian Railway Stories edited by Ruskin Bond. It is one among several stories in that collection, one deals with the supernatural and takes place on the old Sahibganj loop near Monghyr(Munger) and titled The Red Tail lamp. It too is taken from an old issue of the Indian States Railway magazine of long ago.
I think it is Medha Servo Drives.Mollick.R wrote:Sridhar K wrote:Background on the bogies of T18 by Sudhanshu Mani in his blog. Also covers transformers and power
http://anindecisiveindian.blogspot.com/?m=1#Gurus, which company Sri Mani is referring here ??Magical work has been done by an Indian company based in Hyderabad in the field of 3-phase propulsion system. This company has always believed in strong R&D work and has deployed a large group of very competent engineers for years to develop their products in the train propulsion and allied areas. Their products have proved to be more effective and reliable as compared to the systems offered by established multi-nationals in the country; the price of the propulsion system for locomotives and self-propelled vehicles has also come down over the years thanks to their presence. Fortunately, they had bagged the order for the propulsion system, including traction motors, and its complicated controls and that too through an open bidding process.
A few more coming up:vsunder wrote:CRS's in India are a harassed lot nowadays, line inspections all over before formal commissioning, and that too the poor fellow has to travel 75 kms on a rail trolley before the obligatory speed trial. So it is not the usual one or two block sections but huge number of block sections. Since Lemurians and Kannadigas crib Mudy is doing nothing as far as S. India, I will focus on S. India, where CRS inspections have been done in the last two weeks.
This is a huge achievement given the difficulties in acquiring land in KL and the general intransigence of the KL govt to prioritize this. The main KL line between Ernakulam and Trivandrum is a BG track converted from the older MG alignment, and as such has a lot of curves and goes through densely populated areas all of which have busy stations. The multiple river and water channels also add to it, requiring a lot of bridges and culverts. All of this ensures the ruling max speed is not more than 80-90kmph. Add a single line with multiple crossings, and one gets the idea - all trains except perhaps the Rajdhani become slow passenger trains on this route with office goers using express trains for their commutes. Doubling is a dire necessity and hopefully gets done by next year - apart from speeding up a few trains, it would open up some capacity to run local trains to serve the office goer traffic.vsunder wrote:3. Etumanoor-Kurupanthura doubling and electrification CRS done on Trivandrum-Kochi route. Section will open after signal work and interlocking work by Vishu, April 11th or thereabouts. Now only two block sections remain for FEDL between Trivandrum and Kochi, Ettumanoor-Kottayam and Kottayam-Chingavanam(this is not easy, IR needs 3.5 hectacres land and state govt is not doing anything but blaming IR and there is a tunnel). Ettumanoor-Kottayam they have to blow up using explosives an old ROB as a new one is ready and also remove the approach road to the old ROB. So expect some line blocks and traffic dislocations in April between Kottayam and Kochi.
arshyam wrote:A few more coming up:vsunder wrote:CRS's in India are a harassed lot nowadays, line inspections all over before formal commissioning, and that too the poor fellow has to travel 75 kms on a rail trolley before the obligatory speed trial. So it is not the usual one or two block sections but huge number of block sections. Since Lemurians and Kannadigas crib Mudy is doing nothing as far as S. India, I will focus on S. India, where CRS inspections have been done in the last two weeks.
The 3rd and 4th tracks between Korukkupet and Chennai beach are almost ready. A month or two, perhaps. This will ensure better clearance of Chennai port traffic (the port also gave the land for these tracks as this is a narrow chicken's neck type corridor between Beach and Royapuram), and less detention of EMUs; SR might hopefully run more frequent local trains as well. Currently, they all have to vie for space in the existing double line. After this, focus would hopefully shift to the 3rd line between Tambaram and Chengalpattu, work on which had slowed down after Suresh Prabhu moved to the Commerce ministry.
I am not sure if CRS inspection was done yet, but the central TN lines between Salem-Karur-Dindigul and Erode-Karur-Tiruchi are now electrified, thus eliminating the island diesel sections between the electrified CBE and MDU main lines.
Tiruchi-Thanjavur doubling should have been ready by now. Electrification is going on all the way to Karaikal/Nagapattinam for port traffic.
Apart from the above, work on doubling Madurai-Nagercoil (near the cape) is going on. The Thiruvananthapuram-Nagercoil-CAPE track is also under doubling, and this work is apparently going on at a good pace. The upcoming Enayam transshipment port is coming up near CAPE, so these doubling projects are geared toward that. Not to mention the Adani-owned Vizhinjam port near Thiruvananthapuram proper.
With Train 18 gaining pace, the Indian Railways is likely to put an end to the services of the country's first semi high-speed train Tejas Express. At present, the third Tejas Express is ready to be rolled out in Delhi. However, senior railway officials claim that they are contemplating to stop the manufacturing of Tejas Express trains for the time being.
Train 18 or Vande Bharat Express is a flagship train introduced under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Railways is promoting it heavily and has announced at least 130 Train 18s in the coming days. The second one is more or less ready and shall be out in April. From the point of view of design, the coaches of Train 18 are sleeker, aerodynamic, work without a locomotive and have pro-passenger amenities in tune with trains operating abroad. However, the Tejas Express has LHB coaches that are pulled by an engine.
This is good news, Indeed. This is one of several achievements of current leadership. Positive policies and getting the government out of the way can work magic in our country (and elsewhere too, I guess). Hopefully we will see lots of these rolled out.A Nandy wrote:https://www.dnaindia.com/india/report-p ... nd-2732907
With Train 18 gaining pace, the Indian Railways is likely to put an end to the services of the country's first semi high-speed train Tejas Express. At present, the third Tejas Express is ready to be rolled out in Delhi. However, senior railway officials claim that they are contemplating to stop the manufacturing of Tejas Express trains for the time being.
Train 18 or Vande Bharat Express is a flagship train introduced under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Railways is promoting it heavily and has announced at least 130 Train 18s in the coming days. The second one is more or less ready and shall be out in April. From the point of view of design, the coaches of Train 18 are sleeker, aerodynamic, work without a locomotive and have pro-passenger amenities in tune with trains operating abroad. However, the Tejas Express has LHB coaches that are pulled by an engine.