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An Autonomous, low cost, distributed method for observing vehicle track interactions

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conference contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Peter WolfsPeter Wolfs, Steven Bleakley, Steven Senini, Peter Thomas
Experience and field studies have shown that track geometry alone is not a good predictor of rail vehicle response. This paper describes a family of “Health Card” devices - an autonomous device that can be distributed on rolling stock to analyse the vehicle responses. As a distributed system is desired, and the intent is to apply this technology widely across a vehicle fleet, a low initial capital cost and low operating cost solution is desirable. As a consequence the Health Card performs all its sensing operations on the car body and avoids the costs and complications of sensing below the car body especially on unsprung components. Health Cards use solid-state transducers including accelerometers and angular rate sensors with a coordinate transform to resolve car body motions into six degrees of freedom. They then apply spectrogram techniques to obtain a time-frequency representation of the car body motion. These representations are autonomously analyzed to detect and classify transient dynamic events and to infer track degradation or operational risks.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Start Page

279

End Page

286

Number of Pages

8

Start Date

2006-01-01

ISBN-10

0791842037

Location

Atlanta, Ga.

Publisher

ASME

Place of Publication

New York, N.Y.

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Centre for Railway Engineering; TBA Research Institute;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Name of Conference

Joint ASME/IEEE Railroad Conference

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