Fig. 47.
Fig. 48.

In reducing grades on railways with a traffic too heavy to permit loading on the main track, a temporary main track must first be built by one of the methods shown in [Figs. 23], [24] and [25]. The temporary main track, A, [Figs. 44], [45] and [46], is then laid, as shown in [Fig. 28], to carry the traffic of the road unobstructed. The main track then becomes the loading track for the first cut, and the following cuts are made as shown in [Figs. 44], [45] and [46]. The temporary main track, A, is moved to a second position, B, when the material under it must be cut away. Great care should be taken to arrange the cuts so that the temporary main track will have to be moved as few times as possible, and to attain the lowest level when it is moved. In loose gravel or sandy materials wider bermes and longer slopes must be allowed for the shelf on which the temporary main track rests than are shown in the above figures, but the method of doing the work is essentially the same.

If the depth of the original cut in tenacious materials exceed the height which the dipper can reach, and break down the material above it, the cuts are arranged as shown in [Figs. 47, 48] and [49]. Temporary loading tracks, L, are built on the side of the slope, and the first cut on each side made by loading on them; the following cuts are then made, as shown on the figures. If the main line traffic is very heavy, it is turned over the temporary main track, A, [Fig. 47], until the cut is completed.

Fig. 49.

The original cuts are not often more than 10 ft. deep, and the section shown in [Fig. 45] covers the majority of cases.

On double-track railways the traffic in both directions is generally turned over one track for the length of the new cut, thereby avoiding considerable expense in providing two temporary main tracks.

Each different piece of work presents different conditions; and while the same general principles apply to all, every case requires disposition according to its own special circumstances. Great care and study should be exercised in arranging the cuts, to reduce them to the fewest possible number, and avoid shifting, taking up and relaying tracks oftener than absolutely necessary.