Structures for South Pelaw Junction
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Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Whilst the layout itself exists as nothing more than a Templot plan, I've made a start on one of the structures, the bridge at the Washington end of the junction.
One pier is almost complete (with individual stones) and the shell of another has been built along with a start on one of the spans:
and the real thing:
John
One pier is almost complete (with individual stones) and the shell of another has been built along with a start on one of the spans:
and the real thing:
John
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Looks terribly familiar to my eyes John!
Nice stonework coming along too....the cast iron panels above the girder spans are an interesting challenge too.
Keep up the good work
Pete
Nice stonework coming along too....the cast iron panels above the girder spans are an interesting challenge too.
Keep up the good work
Pete
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
pete55 wrote:Looks terribly familiar to my eyes John!
Nice stonework coming along too....the cast iron panels above the girder spans are an interesting challenge too.
Keep up the good work
Pete
Cheers Pete, thought you might recognise it...
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
I've just textured the stones with a ball cutter in a Dremel, slapped a very quick coat of paint on and I'm now much happier with the way the stonework looks.
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Lots of progress tonight and the pier is getting close to completion. The capping stone has been added and the stones have been painted and weathered. Paint is Vallejo Acrylics with a wash of Mig Brown for Dark Green. After each application of the wash, individual stones have been picked out in the original colour then washed over again to provide some variety.
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Its beginning to look a lot like a bridge...
I've completed the main girder structures (details still to add) and positions on the piers still need some slight adjustment.
Unfortunately, everything I've posted already had to be scrapped when I realised that I'd made the bridge 6mm too narrow and, on such a narrow bridge, I decided I couldn't live with the difference.
I've completed the main girder structures (details still to add) and positions on the piers still need some slight adjustment.
Unfortunately, everything I've posted already had to be scrapped when I realised that I'd made the bridge 6mm too narrow and, on such a narrow bridge, I decided I couldn't live with the difference.
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Certainly looking the part.....you'll soon need a baseboard or three at this rate!
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Cheers Pete, you may be right about the baseboards
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Detailing of the bridge girders, 'bolts' (50 of them on this one section) cut from 1mm round styrene strip.
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
John, not a bridge I have any knowledge of, but it looked interesting, so I looked at the photos on your South Pelaw Junction website. The visible parapet beams appear to be cast iron, rather than built-up wrought iron; presumably the whole bridge used cast iron and survived as long as it did because it saw only limited use? I did notice from the photographs that the webs on the lower girders appear to be much deeper than those on the top ones - not surprising as the lower ones are loadbearers, while the top ones just provide a parapet to retain the surfacing, and stop people falling off, and appear to be mounted on the outside edge of the main beams.
I don't know the implication of your having put 'bolts' in quotes, but they were almost invariably rivets, which showed a domed head both sides; bolts will tend work loose under vibration.
And now I should probably head for cover .
I don't know the implication of your having put 'bolts' in quotes, but they were almost invariably rivets, which showed a domed head both sides; bolts will tend work loose under vibration.
And now I should probably head for cover .
Regards
Noel
Noel
Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Having studied Cumbrian cast iron viaducts etc. recently in some detail, I am sure that bolts were used on occasion.
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Thanks for the comments Noel, being ignorant of such thing, they are much appreciated.
The bridge, in earlier days, carried a farm track and, later was used just as a footbridge. The railway was gone by 1985 but the bridge survived until about 4 years ago when it was demolished and completely removed in a little over 24 hours.
Rivets does make more sense but, with over 300 of them to add, I can live without them being domed
The bridge, in earlier days, carried a farm track and, later was used just as a footbridge. The railway was gone by 1985 but the bridge survived until about 4 years ago when it was demolished and completely removed in a little over 24 hours.
Rivets does make more sense but, with over 300 of them to add, I can live without them being domed
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
It's long out of print, but if you can obtain a copy of "Bridges for Modellers", L V Wood, OPC 1985, ISBN 0-86093-226-5, or access to one, it's very enlightening.
Regards
Noel
Noel
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Armchair Modeller wrote:Having studied Cumbrian cast iron viaducts etc. recently in some detail, I am sure that bolts were used on occasion.
According to L T C Rolt they were used in the pillars of the Tay Bridge completed in 1878 by Thomas Bouch, as were gib and cotter joints for the bracing. Meldon http://www.southdownswalking.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/Yes-Tor-Meldon-Viaduct-61-e1446033767816.jpg and Crumlin http://map.coflein.gov.uk/index.php?action=do_details&numlink=34959 seem to have been mostly rivetted at least, but clearly have some bolts. Beyond that I don't know, but I suspect that it is relevant that these and the ones you have been looking at were truss girders. Photographs of built up plate girders only seem to show rivets. The two links above suggest that their built up sections were rivetted, but may have been attached to other sections with bolts.
Regards
Noel
Noel
Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
I don't disagree with your general summary Noel. In any case, the photos and drawings I have seen only give limited information.
In very general terms, I suspect rivets were used to create sub-assemblies and bolts to assemble the large sub-assemblies together on the viaducts I was looking at - and yes you are correct that the girders in these are different to what John is building.
He seems happy, in any case, which is the important thing
In very general terms, I suspect rivets were used to create sub-assemblies and bolts to assemble the large sub-assemblies together on the viaducts I was looking at - and yes you are correct that the girders in these are different to what John is building.
He seems happy, in any case, which is the important thing
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
The cast iron panels on this bridge used nuts and bolts, both to fasten to each other and onto the supporting girders they stood on.
Remind me John to lend you the detail pics taken a year or so before demolition.
Pete
Remind me John to lend you the detail pics taken a year or so before demolition.
Pete
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Pete's post led me to investigate further, which demonstrated that cast iron was always bolted, not rivetted. I haven't found a definite reason, but I assume it relates to cast irons' poor ability to cope with high temperatures and its brittleness under impact. Hot riveting would therefore be likely to cause serious damage to cast iron beams. I was aware of the differences between cast and wrought iron, but had not considered the implications in this context, so thanks, Pete.
Regards
Noel
Noel
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Don't rivets also expand in girth within their holes as they are closed? This would put tensile hoop stresses around the hole, which is a bad idea with cast iron, as it is relatively weak in tension.
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Wouldn't expansion of the rivet produce compression stresses?
Regards
Noel
Noel
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Noel wrote:Wouldn't expansion of the rivet produce compression stresses?
That was certainly my understanding .... I understood that hoop stresses related to pipes etc where the outer skin is in tension?
Tim Lee
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Noel wrote:It's long out of print, but if you can obtain a copy of "Bridges for Modellers", L V Wood, OPC 1985, ISBN 0-86093-226-5, or access to one, it's very enlightening.
I have not looked at this thread for a while but in the absence of anything else the CD A Modeller's Guide to Civil Engineering Structures published by the Scalefour Society and available from our stores might be useful. There is a lot of useful information about cast iron bridges and much else besides.
Terry Bendall
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Noel wrote:Wouldn't expansion of the rivet produce compression stresses?
Action and reaction, compression in the rivet has to be resisted by tension in the surrounding metal, otherwise it will distort (or crack).
Regards
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
I think I follow you, Keith, though it's straining my elementary knowledge of physics! If I've got it right, the material being rivetted undergoes compression forces radially to the hole, and tension forces tangentially to it resulting from the forces acting to enlarge the hole?
Regards
Noel
Noel
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
There should be clearance between the rivet and the hole after the rivet head has been formed. The rivet's job is to create friction between the parts being joined by pulling them together, not to align or reinforce the joint.
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Re: Structures for South Pelaw Junction
Simon_S wrote:There should be clearance between the rivet and the hole after the rivet head has been formed. The rivet's job is to create friction between the parts being joined by pulling them together, not to align or reinforce the joint.
Wouldn't that be similar to a bolt? What merit does one have over the other?
Tim Lee
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