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Carbody tilting - technologies and benefits

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journal contribution
posted on 2010-03-16, 10:13 authored by Rickard Persson, Roger Goodall, Kimiaki Sasaki
Carbody tilting is today a mature and inexpensive technology allowing higher speeds in curves and thus reduced travel time. The technology is accepted by many train operators. Today more than 5000 tilting vehicles, defined as tilting carbodies, have been produced world-wide by di erent suppliers. Tilting trains can be divided into naturally tilted trains and actively tilted trains. However, also natural tilting will often include actuation to ensure satisfactory dynamic performance. The mechanical solutions for tilting involving pendulums or rollers are well proven. They have also become compact enough to avoid passenger area intrusion. The proportion of the lateral acceleration compensated by tilt has decreased over the years. In the early days of tilting train development, it was often assumed that the compensation should be 100%. Compensation of 50-70% are typically used in today's active tilting trains, while natural tilting ones still retain compensation close to 100%. Recent developments in control have provided the market with more clever systems erasing the former problem with time delays. The result is bene cial for both ride comfort and low risk of motion sickness. As an example, running time simulations on the Swedish mainline Stockholm-Gothenburg have shown that the running time benefit for a tilting train vs. a non-tilting train, both with a top speed 275km/h, is about 10%.

History

School

  • Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering

Citation

PERSSON, R., GOODALL, R.M. and SASAKI, K., 2009. Carbody tilting - technologies and benefits. Vehicle System Dynamics, 47(8), pp. 949-981.

Publisher

© Taylor & Francis

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publication date

2009

Notes

This article was accepted for publication in the journal, Vehicle System Dynamics [© Taylor & Francis] and the definitive version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00423110903082234

ISSN

0042-3114;1744-5159

Language

  • en