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Title Crashworthiness studies of locomotive wide nose short hood designs
Record ID 22644
Personal Name
Creator
Tyrell, David C.; Martinez, Eloy E.; Wierzbicki, Tomasz
Source Presented at the ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exhibition, Nov. 15-19, 1999, Nashville, TN.
Corporate
Contributor
Volpe National Transportation Systems Center (U.S. Department of Transportation)
Publisher Federal Railroad Administration (U.S. Department of Transportation) information
Publication Date 19991100
Abstract This paper investigates the parameters that influence the structural response of typical wide nose locomotive short hoods involved in offset collisions. This accident scenario was chosen based upon the railway collision that occurred in Selma, North Carolina, on May 16, 1994. A raised overhanging intermodal trailer on a freight car struck the front of the oncoming passenger locomotive. The objective of the study is to determine the current baseline level of crashworthiness of locomotive hood structures and the potential effectiveness of stronger corner structures. The key issues addressed are: degree of overlap, material and thickness combinations, obliquity, and crush response dependence on initial impacting speed. For a raised offset collision where the intruding body is far away from any support structures, an analytical expression is developed to predict the mean crush force. Comparisons of the results with finite element calculation are favorable. The scenarios involving obliquity, and different initial impacting speeds are investigated using non-linear large deformation finite element analyses. Key results are: obliquity has little effect on the mean crush force for short penetration distances; increased material thickness improves crashworthiness performance; initial impacting speed does not dramatically alter mean crush loads predicted for large offsets away from supports; and the distances from supporting structures have a significant effect of the predicted mode of failure and hence predicted mean crush loads. The results of the study show that it is possible to dramatically increase the crashworthiness responses of short hood structures with minor increases in weight while staying within the original design volume envelope.
TRT Terms Crashworthiness information; Locomotives information; Passenger trains information; Freight cars information; Collisions information; Impact information; Speed information; Railroad safety information
General Subjects North Carolina; Oblique collision; Offset collision
Classification NTL - RAIL TRANSPORTATION - RAIL TRANSPORTATION;
NTL - RAIL TRANSPORTATION - Rail Safety;
NTL - SAFETY AND SECURITY - SAFETY AND SECURITY;
NTL - SAFETY AND SECURITY - Accidents;
NTL - SAFETY AND SECURITY - Vehicle Design
Geographical
Coverage
North Carolina
Resource type Research Paper
URL http://ntl.bts.gov/lib/22000/22600/22644/loccrush.pdf
Format PDF
Language: English
Database NTL Digital Repository
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