Navigate a practical, field‑tested guide to railroad surveying and construction
This edition presents a clear, step‑by‑step description of the duties of the young engineer in preliminary and location surveys and in construction. It opens with practical methods for locating routes, then moves into the organization of field parties, the instruments used, and the daily work of surveying a line. The text blends illustrated procedures with careful notes on how teams operate and how data is recorded and plotted for decision making.
- Learn how a survey party is structured, who does what, and how they coordinate to lay out a railroad line.
- Follow real‑world methods for measuring grades, curves, slope, and contours, with notes on field notebooks and measurement practice.
- Understand key construction topics, including culverts, bridges, masonry, rivetting, and how design choices affect safety and cost.
- Get a behind‑the‑scenes look at the early stages of a railroad project, from field notes to final location decisions and estimates.
Ideal for readers of historical engineering practices, railroad history, or hands‑on field manuals who want a concise, no‑frills view of how early railway work was planned and executed.