Hallade method

The Hallade method, devised by Frenchman Emile Hallade, is a method of surveying, designing and setting out curves in railway track.[1]

It involves measuring the offset of a string line from the outside of a curve at the central point of a chord. A standard chord length is used: in the UK this is conventionally one chain, i.e. 22 yards. Half chords, i.e. half a chain intervals, are marked on the datum rail using chalk. The string, which is one chain long, is then held taut with one end on two marks at each end of a chord, and the offset at the half chord mark measured. The versine of the chord, which is equal to this measured offset value can be calculated using the approximation of:

versin(\theta)=1-cos(\theta)

which is:

v = \frac{L^2}{8r}

where v = versine (mm) L = chord length (m) r = radius of curve (m)

By comparing the surveyed versine figures to the design versines, this can then be used to determine what slues should be applied to the track in order to make the curve correctly aligned. This is often done using pegs which are driven into the ground in the cess beside the track to be aligned. The process of putting the pegs in the correct positions is known as 'setting out'.

If the curve needs to be of a desired constant radius, which will usually be determined by physical obstructions and the degree of cant which is permitted, the versine can be calculated for the desired radius using this approximation. In practice, many track curves are transition curves and so have changing radii. In order to maintain a smooth transition, the differences in versines between consecutive half chords are measured and minimised.

This can be done manually, and this method is still used in the UK railway. However, due to the complexity of the calculations over long lengths of track, it is now often done computationally,[2] with the data being loaded straight onto a computer controlled tamping and lining machine for implementation.

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