ZIG ZAG (RAILWAY)

A railway 'zig zag', also called a switchback, is a way of climbing hills in difficult country with a minimal need for tunnels and heavy earthworks. For a short distance (corresponding to the middle leg of the letter "Z"), the direction of travel is reversed, before the original direction is resumed.

Contents
Advantages
Disadvantages
Alternate names
Location of zig zags
See also

Advantages


The advantages of a zig zag include speed and relative cheapness of construction, with no need to worsen the ruling grade, compared to the alternative which almost certainly will require tunnels which are slow and costly to build. Where traffic is modest, a zig zag may well be a sensible long term solution.

Disadvantages


Zig zags suffer from a number of possible limitations:

★ The length of a train will be limited by length of track at the top and bottom points.

★ Reversing a train without running an engine around to the rear of the train is hazardous. Top and tail or push pull operation with engines at the rear of the train helps.

★ The process is slow.

Alternate names



★ In the United States, zig zags are called 'switchbacks'.

Location of zig zags



Argentina


Tren a las Nubes

Australia


Kalamunda Zig Zag - 2 reversals


Lapstone Zig Zag - 2 reversals


★ Lithgow Zig Zag ( see Zig Zag Railway )


Mundaring Weir Branch Railway

Germany


★ Zig Zags in use



Rauenstein (railway-line: Hinterlandbahn)



Lauscha (railway-line: SonnebergProbstzella)



Ernstthal am Rennsteig: created by close of the railway-line: Ernstthal–Probstzella



Rennsteig (railway-line: Rennsteigbahn, IlmenauThemar)



Michaelstein (railway-line: Rübelandbahn)



Wurzbach (railway-line: SaalfeldBlankenstein)


★ out of use



Schillingsfürst (dismantled)



Lenzkirch in the Blackforrest (dismantled)



Elm (replaced in 1914 by Distelrasen-Tunnel, but the structure is conserved within the railway-lines Frankfurt am Main - Fulda, Fulda - Gemünden and the connecting curve between the stations Elm and Schlüchtern



★ Railway-line Steinhelle-Medebach (double zig zag)



★ Railwaystation ''Mainspitze'' in Frankfurt am Main, used from 1846 - 1848 to reach the provisional Frankfurt terminal of the Main-Neckar-Eisenbahn (dismantled)



Erdbach-Station, Westerwaldquerbahn

India


Darjeeling Himalayan Railway has six full zig zags, most are from the construction of the current railway but one was added in the 1940s and at least one other was used temporarily following storm damage, narrow gauge

Japan


Hakone Tozan Line has three zig zags.


★ , the work train for the erosion control construction, is not open to general public, but deserves a mention for its 38 zig zags, 18 of them in a row. [1]

South Korea


Yeongdong Line, between Heungjeon station and Nahanjeong station. This section will be closed in 2009 and will be replaced by new tunnel .

Pakistan


Khyber Pass

Peru


★ Cacray Zigzag on the Central Railway of Peru - with 9 switchbacks


PeruRail between Cuzco to Machu Picchu - 5 switchbacks

Taiwan


Alishan Forest Railway

United States


8 Switchbacks at Cascade on GN - replaced by tunnel which was in turn replaced by a longer tunnel.


Cass Scenic Railroad, West Virginia - 2 switchbacks with 11% grade between, still in use

See also



★ Zig Zags are often an alternative to a spiral though these may require long tunnels.

Horseshoe curve (railway) - follows convenient side gully to gain height.

Hillclimbing (railway)

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