Heaviest trains


The heaviest trains in the world are freight trains hauling bulk commodities such as coal and iron ore.
The weight of trains generally does not include the weight of the operating locomotives; this is not considered dead weight, so is not included. If for example a train had two locomotives operating and was simply hauling a third off line, this third locomotive would be included in the payload weight.

Specifications

Gauge

If the track and its alignment are strong, gauge is not so important. Among railways with over gross train weight, the Sishen–Saldanha railway line uses, while the others use.
Most Pilbara region railways operate on pre-stressed rail, meaning that each metre of track weighs 68 kg or each yard of track weighs 137 pounds. This gives the track the strength to carry such heavy loads.

Axle load

The highest permitted weight per axle is:
Compare:
The track bed and the strength of the rails themselves limit the axle load.

Line load

Line load is the weight per metre or foot of train length. The strength of bridges is what mainly limits this.
Examples:
Curves must not be too sharp; wagons may be pulled off the track and derailed, especially with general freight trains where light and heavy wagons are intermixed, less so if all cars in a train are loaded and unloaded at the same place and equally much. The meaning of "too sharp" depends as much on experience as on a specific formula.

Couplers

The couplers must be strong enough in heavy trains. Janney couplers are used for the heaviest trains. The SA3 couplers handle trains of, as Russian trains limited by loop lengths, etc.; maximum load of SA3 couplers have not been tested. The standard buffers and chain couplers used in Europe can only handle train weight, but trials are made to push this limit to.

Countries

Australia

The heaviest trains length is 750m and weighing 4000 tons.
And a recorded 12000 tons train in 1993 with 100 six axle iron ore cars pulled by 6 GT26CW locomotives in three positions, Front, middle and at the end connected by locotrol.

Kenya

Sierra Leone had a narrow gauge railway with 5 t axleloads. Train loads were necessarily very limited, which increased costs counter-productively, as large numbers of small trains were needed to haul tonnages that heavier railways could haul with fewer
trains. For example, in 1956 fourteen modern 4-8-2+2-8-4 Garratts were purchased from Beyer-Peacock. These locos increased the maximum load over 1:50 grades from 200 tons to 270 tons.

South Africa

The world heaviest train record is registered as follows:
Australia, BHP: 2001, trial with 682 ore cars and eight distributed GE AC6000CW locomotives with a total weight of 99,734 t
South Africa, Sishen Saldanha: 1989, 660 fully laden ore trucks, nine electric locomotives, seven Diesel engines and three other cars with a total weight of 70,543 tons made the journey, taking 12 minutes to pass by the watching engineers.