Everything about Rotary Snowplow totally explained
A
rotary snowplow is a piece of
railroad snowfighting equipment. It is characterized by the large circular set of blades on its front end that rotate as a unit to cut through the snow on the track ahead of it. In this way, a rotary
snowplow is similar to a
tunnel boring machine that was first used to drill the
Hoosac Tunnel in 1853.
The rotary was invented by a Canadian dentist in
1869, but a prototype wasn't built until the Leslie Brothers constructed one in
1883.
Operation
Wedge snowplows were the traditional automated method of clearing
snow from
railroad tracks. These pushed snow off the tracks, deflecting it to the side. Deeper drifts, however, can't be easily cleared by this method; there's simply too much snow to be moved. For this purpose, the rotary snowplow was devised.
When a snowfall or snow drift becomes too deep, railroads call on their "big guns" in snowfighting equipment - the rotary. The plow isn't self-propelled, so one or more
locomotives are coupled behind it to push the plow along the line. An engine within the plow's carbody rotates the large circular assembly at the front of the plow. The blades on this wheel cut through the snow and force it through a channel just behind the disk to an output chute located at the top of the blade assembly.
The chute can be adjusted to throw the snow to either the left or the right side of the tracks. An operator sits in a cab just above and behind the blade assembly to control the speed of the blades and the direction of output for the snow from the output chute. With the advent of dieselization,
MU controls have been added to the cabs, so that the pushing locomotives can also be controlled from the plow's cab.
In areas of particularly deep snowfall, such as
California's
Donner Pass, railroads sometimes would create a train consisting of a rotary snowplow at each end (with the blade ends pointing away from each other), and two or three locomotives coupled between them. With a plow on each end, the train would be able to get itself back to its starting location even if the snowfall was heavy enough to obscure the tracks it had just passed over. Such a train would also be able to efficiently clear multiple track mainlines as it could make a pass in one direction on one track and then reverse direction and clear the next track. This practice became standard for the
Southern Pacific Railroad on Donner Pass following the January 1952 stranding of the
City of San Francisco; during attempts to clear the
avalanches that had trapped the train, two rotary plows were themselves trapped by further avalanches, and the crew of a third was killed when their plow was directly hit by an avalanche.
Rotary snowplows are highly expensive due to their high maintenance costs, which the owning railroad must pay regardless of whether they're needed in a given year. As a result, most railroads have eliminated their rotaries, preferring to use a variety of types of fixed-blade plows that have significantly lower maintenance costs, in conjunction with
bulldozers, which can be used year-round on maintenance-of-way projects. In addition, because rotaries leave a
cut in the snowbank that fixed-blade plows can't push snow past, once rotaries have been used, they must be used for all further significant snowfalls until the snowbank has melted. Since rotaries, which need some form of fuel to power the blades, also cost more to operate than fixed-blade plows, they're now generally considered to be a "weapon of last resort" for the railroads that own them; they're only used when snow is too deep or heavy for fixed-blade plows.
The few remaining rotary plows are either owned by
museum railroads, or are kept in reserve for areas with poor road access and routine severe snowfall conditions; the largest remaining fleet of rotaries consists of
Union Pacific Railroad's six ex-Southern Pacific plows reserved for Donner Pass.
Power
Early rotaries had steam engines inside their carbodies to power the blades; a few are still in working order, and in particular one on the
White Pass & Yukon Route in
Alaska performs annual demonstration runs through thick snow for the benefit of
photographers and
enthusiasts. Newer constructed rotaries are either diesel or electric powered; in the latter case, an electric supply is required. Many steam plows were converted. Some electric plows can take their power from a locomotive, while others are semi-permanently coupled to power units, generally old locomotives with their
traction motors removed; these are colloquially called "snails". (This is derived from the fact that engineless but motored units that take their power from another locomotive are "
slugs" - thus the opposite, with engine but no motors, is a "snail").
Northern Pacific Rotary 10 steam snowplow
The
Northern Pacific Rotary 10 steam snowplow built in November,
1907 is currently owned by the
Northwest Railway Museum and is on display in
Snoqualmie, Washington.
Image:Snow Plow-3.jpg|Northern Pacific Rotary 10 steam snowplow with tender
Image:Snow Plow-2.jpg|Northern Pacific Rotary 10 steam snowplow
Image:Snow Plow-1.jpg|Northern Pacific Rotary 10 steam snowplow from front end
Preservation
Southern Pacific rotary snowplow MW208 is preserved in operational condition at the
Western Pacific Railroad Museum at
Portola, California.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Rotary Snowplow'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://rotary_snowplow.totallyexplained.com">Rotary snowplow Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |