Question:
can trains travel up hills?
Thomas C
2008-02-01 01:12:33 UTC
can trains travel up hills?
31 answers:
Sal*UK
2008-02-01 01:15:27 UTC
Of course!!
2008-02-03 20:23:42 UTC
Of course a train can travel up hill, but not a real steep one. A train can only handle a certain amount of incline.



Take the Lickey Incline for example, a Virgin Voyager can top the hill at 60 Mph I think, In the Past they used to have to use backing trains to get up there.



All depends on the engine, apparently I heard something about using sand to help give trains grip at hills, but I'm not too sure on that.
Christina K
2008-02-01 11:03:21 UTC
The Darjeeling light railway goes all the way up to Darjeeling on the slopes of the Himalaya from the plains of Assam using a series of 'loops' where it goes round in a small circle and crosses over it's own tracks, that keeps the gradient low enough for the train to manage. Otherwise mountain railways may use rack and pinion systems where cogs under the train link in to a notched central rail, as on the train up Snowdon. Funicular systems, (not really trains), used to use the weight of one car, with tanks full of water, to pull the other up as it descends. The water is then pumped back up to the car at the top and the process repeated, as in the Hastings West Hill and East Hill lifts. Nowadays most funiculars simply use electricity, but are still pulled up by cable. Normal mainline trains can only manage very limited gradients, so their tracks have to be engineered very carefully to follow contours gradually up or round hills.
Kevan M
2008-02-01 09:47:16 UTC
Can travel up Mountains if the tracks are laid correctly. The higher the gradiant the igger the problem. The Railways in the Andes are the best example with plenty of switch backs cut into the mountain so the train can run up in a crab like motion. The Best example in the UK of a Train going up a steep hill / mountain is of course the Snowdonia Railway.

Other examples are the short venhicular railways which can be found at seaside resorts like the two at Hastings which go up the cliffs.
2008-02-04 22:24:14 UTC
Certainly

I live in an area where trains cross the Continental Divide every day in the Rocky Mountains, I would have to consider that as hills.

they normally dont likke to negotiate as steep of grades as highways do but it is possible.

The steepest grade operated by adhesion is about 8% and cog railways have ran up around 14% I think.

Just like your vehicle or a truck, all it takes is horsepower and torque, lots of it.
Joolz of Salopia
2008-02-04 13:33:07 UTC
Yes trains do go up hills! If you climb mount Snowdon in Wales there is a railway that goes to the top.

Then if you go to Switzerland you will find that there are railways climbing the alps. The lines are adapted and special engines run on them.

But you will find that even on the normal railway that trains are going up & down hills. Just look at the lines in Scotland & Yorkshire!
2008-02-04 12:57:22 UTC
Yes of course they can look at trains like the Glacier Express that travels through hills and mountains
2008-02-03 13:52:49 UTC
Yes. The Steepest self propelled trains (as opposed to cable hauled) are the Pilatusbahn in Switzerland. The steepest grades on the route are 1 in 2! It climbs 5300ft in 3 miles.



I believe that the steepest adhesion railway is 1 in 11 in the French alps
squeaky guinea pig
2008-02-01 13:38:17 UTC
Yes, a train can travel up a shallow gradient by means of adhesion (friction between the wheel and the rail) but a sharper gradient needs a rack, a set of teeth between the rails which is engaged by a cogwheel on the engine, hence, rack railway (or cog railway in the USA)
J L
2008-02-05 08:05:56 UTC
Yes.

Some mainline railroads had pretty steep grades, like the Canadian Pacific on the eastern side of the Rockies. From 1885 to 1909 it was a 4.5% grade from the Continental Divide to Field, BC. -- every 100 metres, there is a 4.5 metre drop. It's pretty impressive.
lexi
2008-02-01 09:21:27 UTC
Yes. All they have to do is say, "I think I can.... I think I can..." over and over again.



*Rolls eyes*



Of course trains can travel up hills. Otherwise, they wouldn't get very far. There are hills everywhere. If trains couldn't travel uphill, we wouldn't be able to ride them to other cities.
omnisource
2008-02-01 09:20:58 UTC
SURE! Up to a certain angle, assuming adequate horsepower and traction.

They even make specialty trains for EXTREME hill climbing. These are called cog railroads, which use a locking-rachet type of locomotion.
david k
2008-02-01 09:20:40 UTC
Yep. They also go down hill. And they can even go left and right! Sometimes they even do a combination of these at the same time.
planksheer
2008-02-01 13:34:25 UTC
Sure. They do all the time. The ruling grade may limit the tonnage and / or require multiple units. On my little railroad, we don't have more than a mile of straight or level track at any given point.
Richy the wise guy
2008-02-01 09:18:31 UTC
Yes. Take the Lickey Incline as an example.
Libris Fidelis
2008-02-02 13:03:22 UTC
Trains are like electricity, they cannot go around corners or up and down hills, they have to go straight.



Honest. George W. Bush told me that!
2008-02-01 17:45:53 UTC
No, when they get to the bottom of the hill they have to be scrapped.
4472
2008-02-01 11:57:43 UTC
yes , and with a rack and pinon a very steep hill
j.pee69
2008-02-01 09:21:12 UTC
Yes but if it is very steep it my go up in diagonals or zig zag
Thekunt DAS ORIGINAL
2008-02-01 14:41:23 UTC
Trains only have problems with stairs.
2008-02-01 09:21:22 UTC
Have you ever read the book The little engine that could? I think I can, I think I can,,,,,and he did.
Empress
2008-02-01 09:15:58 UTC
yes
2008-02-02 02:47:38 UTC
Now think about what you asked, US ain't flat
aviophage
2008-02-01 18:35:21 UTC
Right on up!
2008-02-01 09:21:17 UTC
yes of course they can
Samurai Hoghead
2008-02-01 19:23:29 UTC
Throttle eight and sand, baby...
2008-02-01 09:16:50 UTC
lol...well of course dear.
hedgeybear
2008-02-02 20:21:44 UTC
Do bears sh*t in the woods?
Mike O Dea
2008-02-01 11:02:09 UTC
Jesus go back to school good man.!:)
ezekiel
2008-02-02 19:02:41 UTC
You surely can't be serious!
slyder
2008-02-01 01:27:08 UTC
only backwards


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