• Arcing insulator on Red Line (4/27/16) - again

  • Discussion related to DC area passenger rail services from Northern Virginia to Baltimore, MD. Includes Light Rail and Baltimore Subway.
Discussion related to DC area passenger rail services from Northern Virginia to Baltimore, MD. Includes Light Rail and Baltimore Subway.

Moderators: mtuandrew, therock, Robert Paniagua

  by JDC
 
There is an arcing insulator on the Red Line, causing trains to bypass Friendship Heights. I only post this because this is what, the third or fourth (?) arcing insulator on the Red line in this segment over the past 7 days? https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/dr- ... nter-stop/
  by srepetsk
 
JDC wrote:There is an arcing insulator on the Red Line, causing trains to bypass Friendship Heights. I only post this because this is what, the third or fourth (?) arcing insulator on the Red line in this segment over the past 7 days? https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/dr- ... nter-stop/
6 separate incidents since the 23rd. 4 on A2, 2 on A1.
  by MCL1981
 
Isn't that within the area where they have a water impingement problem in the tunnels that nobody wants to fix?
  by HiLoMo
 
MCL1981 wrote:Isn't that within the area where they have a water impingement problem in the tunnels that nobody wants to fix?
Yea the tunnel in that area has the water ingress issue.
  by MCL1981
 
DUring the shutdown, they were looking for anything. But only repaired critical issues and jumpers.
  by STrRedWolf
 
JDC wrote:Metro is about to conduct a maintenance 'surge' to address this issue. https://wamu.org/news/16/04/28/metro_an ... g_red_line
Sounds like they're only trying to divert the leaks off the third rail and into drainage that's not able to handle it. Temporary, unfortunately.

They really need to start injecting concrete or liquid latex in these leaks, or do something more long-term, starting last year.
  by Sand Box John
 
"STrRedWolf"
They really need to start injecting concrete or liquid latex in these leaks, or do something more long-term, starting last year.


WMATA has been pumping grout into surrounding bedrock for years. The exercise has become a game of wack-a-mole. They plug up one area only to have the water find a new path of least resistance somewhere else.

I think the recent option that was deemed to costly could be done more cheaply by building a steel frame supporting a sheet metal roof to divert the water. The steel frame would be bolted and or welded to the existing steel horse shoe arch ribs that are embedded in the existing shotcrete tunnel linings.

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Existing.

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Existing.

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With sheet metal roof.