smallspy
Senior Member
To be honest, most of the locations that GO operates on with any regularity are already using #20 crossovers.It was mentioned earlier that GO wants to upgrade some of their turnouts to #20's. What are most of the turnouts on the GO network currently rated at? Any idea where they're adding #20 turnouts on the GO network?
There are a couple of key locations however that have smaller, lower-speed crossovers installed. The plant at Fort York (located immediately west of Stratchan on the Oakville Sub) is a key one that is in dire need of being upgraded.
The number generally indicates the ratio at which the rails depart from each other when measured at the frog - i.e. it will take 20 feet from the point of the frog for the rails to reach a divergent distance of 1 foot apart. This is a bit loose and fast however, as some turnout geometries specify the diverging track as a spiral rather than a tangent, and so in those cases the number is meant as a means to allow engineering folks to figure out the space or speed requirements for the turnout.Does the length of a turnout indicate whether the geometry allows for high speeds? I'm curious about the turnouts on the new section of the Trillium line in Ottawa. They are about 100 meters in length and not near the stations, so one hopes they will allow for 80 kph turnouts. (Yes, Ottawa bought 120 kph trains and won't even run them at 100 on long straight sections of track in the tundra.)
Dan