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What is this please

nickmn

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26 Apr 2025
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herts
Hi
Have just returned from Barmouth in mid Wales.
Can someone please let me know what the item in the photo is. There was one of these at each end of the bridge that carries the railway across the estuary at Barmouth.
Thanks
Nick Makin
 

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Mcr Warrior

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8 Jan 2009
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Flange lubricator
Installed to reduce the 'wear and tear' to both rail wheels and the actual track itself, presumably? Are there many such pieces of kit around the GB network, or do they tend to only get installed on certain sections of track with particular characteristics, such as on Barmouth Bridge, where track replacement is maybe trickier?
 

swt_passenger

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Installed to reduce the 'wear and tear' to both rail wheels and the actual track itself, presumably? Are there many such pieces of kit around the GB network, or do they tend to only get installed on certain sections of track with particular characteristics, such as on Barmouth Bridge, where track replacement is maybe trickier?
They’re all over the network. Must be many hundreds if not thousands of them.
 

swt_passenger

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Looking at photos of the refurbished bridge, it seems the track is equipped with heavy-duty check-rails the whole length of the bridge:
Barmouth Bridge

© Copyright Mark Percy and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
hence the flange lubricators at each end. (Click on the photo to go to the larger original on the Geograph website.)
Those are a relatively unusual form of guard rail, (I think using flat bottom rail rotated 90 degrees), and the wheels will not be in contact with them unless a derailment occurs.
 

John Webb

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St Albans
Those are a relatively unusual form of guard rail, (I think using flat bottom rail rotated 90 degrees), and the wheels will not be in contact with them unless a derailment occurs.
It's not easy to see from angled views taken from the adjacent walkway exactly how much clearance there is between guard rail and track. I think there is a limited gap, and with the normal degree of 'wander' a wheel-set can have I suspect that contact does occur, hence the lubricators.
 

Annetts key

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West is best
Flange lubricator
Also known as rail greasers, as if you have to work on the track near them, you find yourself absolutely covered in the stuff...

As said above, there are thousands of them. And various different types exist, from purely mechanical through to solar PV cell electrically powered types.

Normally found on the approach / start of tighter radius curves. Some can be seen from platforms where the station is on or near curved track.

The railway used to have dedicated maintenance staff to look after this type of equipment.
 

swt_passenger

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It's not easy to see from angled views taken from the adjacent walkway exactly how much clearance there is between guard rail and track. I think there is a limited gap, and with the normal degree of 'wander' a wheel-set can have I suspect that contact does occur, hence the lubricators.
I found a couple of videos of trains crossing from after the closure, seems to me there’s loads of clearance. What we really need is a view taken from the middle of the track, or taken from a train cab.

I took a screen shot from Geoff Marshall’s video of the bridge (the picture shows an angled view of the rails and guard rails through the swing bridge section girders:

IMG_1663.jpeg

But here’s a link to the complete video, it shows many ‘almost’ views of the track, during a walk over the pedestrian bridge alongside the railway.
 
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