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High-Speed Railway, Taiwan: Taiwan is building a high-speed railway between its two largest cities, the northern city of Taipei and the southern city of Kaohsiung, some 345 km away. The HSR will cut inter-city travel time to just ninety minutes, down from 4.5 hours with the existing rail system.
At the site discussed in this story, piers for the viaduct were to be located on both sides of a busy railway. To verify that the track bed remained safe, stable, and operational during excavation of the foundation for the piers, a track monitoring system was required. The Taiwan Railway Administration required that the automated system obtain data at 30 second intervals and transmit the data to a remote base station for analysis. The contractor required that the system be self-powered, competitively priced, and supported by good service. The Track Monitoring System
Installation of the instrumentation went smoothly, but the installation team had to be very alert to train movement and keep everyone at the site informed of their work. In erecting the solar panel, the team had to pay special attention to the high-voltage overhead power cable used by the railway. Comparison of Track Monitoring MethodsIn the past, railways had only two options for monitoring track safety: visual inspections and leveling surveys. Now, there are other options: high-tech instrumentation coupled with data loggers and wireless data transmission. The table below shows a comparison of the two methods.
ConclusionTaiwan has many large rail projects already underway or in planning, including MRT systems in Taipei and Kaohsiung, additional sites of the High Speed Rail project, the Taiwan Eastern Railway Improvement Project, the Metropolitan MRT and Rail Transportation Project and the C.K.S Airport Rail Link Project. These projects, all being built in densely populated and developed areas, will require safety monitoring and are likely to benefit from automated monitoring such as the system described above. Thanks to Mu-Pin Kao of San Lien Technology Corporation for contributing this story. San Lien has been the exclusive representative in Taiwan for Slope Indicator products since 1970. Previous Stories |