Power Off! Challenges in Planning and Executing Power Isolations on Shared-Use Electrified Railways

Reddy and his team while at NYC Transit or a TRB publication with authors

February 2021


Authors:
Alex Lu, Aleksandr Lukatskiy, Zhiqi Zhong, John G. Allen


Abstracts:

Electric railways are fast, clean, and safe, but complex to operate and maintain. Electric traction infrastructure includes signal power and feeder lines that remain live during isolations and complicate maintenance processes. Stakeholders involved in power outage planning include contractors, linemen, groundmen, power directors, dispatchers, conductor-flag, and support personnel. Weekly planning processes for track time requires many contingencies due to large number of moving parts and factors not known in advance, like personnel availability. Electrical and mechanical environments faced by crews working in adjacent areas may be entirely different and require a “bespoke” circuit configuration to de-energize catenary, which must be planned meticulously. Although recent automation improved real-time “plate order” communications between power directors and dispatchers, each outage still requires many manual switching operations. Net impact of this isolation process reduces available construction work windows nightly from a nominal 7 hours to 2 hrs 39 mins. We recommend joint design of electrical and civil infrastructure, cross-training between disciplines, limiting maximum number of concurrent outages, formal study of maintenance outage capacity, and further automation in power switching.

https://arxiv.org/abs/2102.04517


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