Smart guidance for safe crossings where railroads meet high‑voltage lines.
This concise reference helps engineers understand the key design and safety factors needed for overhead crossings, with practical rules of thumb drawn from real-world testing and early 20th‑century practice.
The book frames the scope around keeping crossings strong, simple, and safe. It discusses how to protect circuits, select appropriate insulators, and set reasonable safety margins without overdoing voltage ratings. You’ll see how wind, sleet, and snow loads are analyzed, and how those conditions influence recommended configurations for conductors and insulators at railroad crossings.
- How to plan for protection against lightning, static strains, and weather effects at crossings.
- Guidance on conductor sizing, dead‑ending methods, and insulator selection for reliability.
- Wind-pressure calculations and practical load assumptions under sleet and snow.
- Approaches to maintain safety with a clear factor of safety in various operating scenarios.
Ideal for readers of historical engineering methods, early power transmission practices, and those who design or evaluate overhead crossings.