Dual electrification is a system whereby a railway line is supplied power both via overhead catenary and a third rail. This is done to enable trains that use either system of power to share the same railway line, for example in the case of mainline and suburban trains (as used at Hamburg S-Bahn between 1940 and 1955).[1]
Examples
editGermany
edit- Line S3 of the Hamburg S-Bahn changeover at Neugraben.
- Birkenwerder station to be used by Berlin S-Bahn lines S1 and S8 (third rail) and regional train RB20 (overhead lines)
Greece
edit- Line 3 of Athens Metro uses third rail for underground part and overhead power supply on surface for access to/from Airport.
Norway
edit- between Jar station and Bekkestua station, where metro line 3 and tram line 13 share tracks
United Kingdom
edit- North London Line changeover at Acton Central, London.
- Northern City Line changeover at Drayton Park, London.
- Thameslink route changeover at City Thameslink (northbound) and Farringdon (southbound), London.
- West London line changeover between Willesden Junction and Shepherd's Bush, London.
- High Speed 1 changeover at platforms 5 and 6 of Ebbsfleet International, Kent.
United States
edit- South of Pelham station (New York), where New Haven Line's M8's change from 3rd rail to catenary (northbound) and vice versa (southbound).
- Pennsylvania Station (New York City)
- East River Tunnels between Queens and Manhattan in New York City, NY
- North River Tunnels between Weehawken, NJ and New York City, NY
- Like Athens, the MBTA Blue Line (Boston) uses third rail for the underground part, and switches to overhead catenary power at Airport station.
Mainland China
editVariations
editBoth systems live
editThe system is usually used only in exceptional cases as it can lead to problems caused by the interaction of the electric circuits; for example, where one system is powered with direct current and another by alternating current (AC), premagnetisation of the substation transformers of the AC system can occur.
One system live
editA similar arrangement to dual electrification is one in which both means of powering a train are present, but not live simultaneously. Such arrangements can be found in frontier stations and in sections of railway used for running tests.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-08. Retrieved 2017-08-08.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)