Larmanjat guided rail system

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Demonstration train at Paris, 1867. The spoked wheel at the front was used to vary the weight distribution between the road and rail wheels.

The Larmanjat guided rail system was a 19th-century French hybrid road-and-rail system. It sought to combine the benefits of the low friction of metal wheels running on a single metal rail with the improved

Seine et Oise, to the east of Paris. The success of this line gained the attention of Portuguese diplomat the Duke of Saldanha for the construction of lines around Lisbon. He formed a company in London to build lines between Lisbon and Cintra and Lisbon and Torres Vedras, but these were not successful and the company was declared bankrupt in 1875. In 1873 Larmanjat was authorised to install his track on a length of towpath on the Canal de Bourgogne
to haul heavy barges. He did not complete the project.

Demonstration at the Universal Exhibition

The "locomobile"

The locomotive Larmanjat demonstrated at the Paris exhibition of 1867 (the "locomobile"[1]) had two pivoting, double-flanged, metal wheels mounted in line and carrying most of the locomotive's weight on the single rail. Two larger wheels, one on each side and in contact with the road surface, were mounted on a central cross-axle. The cross-axle was driven through spiral bevel gear reduction and the wheels were a loose fit on the axle to allow for different rotational speeds, so easing the negotiation of turns. Drive was transmitted only when coil springs mounted in the hubs were sufficiently wound up.[2] Whereas in normal running most of the weight fell onto the rail, when extra traction was required the locomotive was tilted by a screw mechanism moving a linear-motion slide, operated from a position on the front of the vehicle; this brought extra weight to bear onto the road wheels. On the carriages, to reduce friction all the weight was carried by the central wheels; the side wheels served only to keep the vehicles upright.[3][4]

Raincy and Montfermeil line

On the public roadway between Raincy and Montfermeil

Consequent on the success of the Paris trial, in August 1868 Larmanjat opened a 5-kilometre (3-mile) line along the existing public road between Raincy and Montfermeil, east of Paris, to demonstrate how a cheaply laid track would be sufficient where only light traffic was expected. The locomotive was again supported on a single rail, with the driving wheels and the side wheels of the carriages running on the ordinary surface of the road. On the opening day the journey from Raincy to Montfermeil (the uphill direction with a maximum gradient of 1 in 14, 7%) took 20 minutes and the return journey, with firm application of the brakes, 17. A

Franco-Prussian war.[6][7]

Lisbon steam tramways

Sharp Stewart guided rail locomotive Lisboa for Lisbon Steam Tramways
Trial at Buckhurst Hill, Essex, 1872
Lisbon—Cintra timetable July 1873
Notice of suspension of service, April 1875

In March 1869, the Duke of Saldanha, Portuguese ambassador in Paris, inspected the Raincy-Montfermeil project and was persuaded of its capabilities. He built, largely at his own expense, a 5-kilometre (3-mile) Larmanjat line between Lisbon and Lumiar. This was inaugurated on 31 January 1870.[8]

To complete the Lisbon project of 100 kilometres (63 miles) of line to Torres Vedras and Cintra, more capital was needed, so Saldanha set up the Lisbon Steam Tramways Company Ltd. in London on July 1871, with

Sharp Stewart of Manchester to build a Larmanjat locomotive to his design, incorporating a new hydraulic mechanism to adjust the locomotive's weight distribution from within the cab, replacing the original screw mechanism. He specified that the roadway was to be supplemented by wooden planks to carry the driving wheels.[11]

Sharp Stewart delivered the first locomotive to Buckhurst Hill, Essex, in December 1872, where a length of demonstration track had been laid. Public trials were held (with rolling stock supplied by Brown and Marshalls of Birmingham[12]) over two days in January 1873. Performance was satisfactory on the first day, when the weather was dry, but on the second day rain made the wooden planks slippery and the driving wheels were unable to maintain sufficient traction.[13] Nonetheless, Clark, Punchard were authorised to continue construction in Lisbon.[10]

The line to Cintra was completed by February 1873 and to Torres Vedras in May.[10] In the conditions experienced in Portugal, Trevithick's engines and track were not successful: derailments occurred from stones obstructing the planks or the rail; in wet weather the locomotives struggled for traction on the warped and slippery planks; in dry weather gritty dust overwhelmed the passengers and entered the working parts of the locomotives, causing frequent breakdowns.[14]

After 22 months in operation, always running at a loss, the Lisbon Steam Tramways Company was deemed to have "completely failed in [its] undertaking", and on 16 July 1875 it was made the subject of a

Chancery Division of the High Court in London.[15][16]

Punchard and Clark, the contractors appointed by the promoting company, were the subject of legal proceedings alleging fraud—it was claimed that they had employed financier Albert Grant dishonestly to "ramp" the price of their shares in the tramway company. It was stated in court that Grant had bribed financial journalists to report favourably on the investment, with the finance editor of The Times, Marmaduke Sampson, receiving £275.[17] The plaintiff (a dissatisfied shareholder) was awarded the purchase price of his shares.[18][19]

Other proposed lines

In September 1869, citing the success of the Raincy-Montfermeil line, Larmanjat applied for authorisation to build a line along departmental road 3 from Joigny to Toucy, Department de L'Yonne, France. Public consultation was ordered and in April 1874 (by which time the indifferent performance of the Larmanjat tramways at Lisbon had become evident) permission was refused.[20][21]

Larmanjat secured authorisation to build a 15-kilometre (9-mile) line on public roadways from

metre-gauge track, but the nickname "La Brouette" continued in use long after the new line was opened.[22]

Canal de Bourgogne

In January 1873 Larmanjet secured a 40-year concession for towpath haulage of barges between Roche and St-Jean-de-Losne on the Canal de Bourgogne, a distance of 240 kilometres (150 miles).[23][24] He reasoned that the centre rail would resist any tendency for the boats to pull the locomotives sideways into the water, and that fragile canal banks would bear the weight of his small engines better than that of highway traction engines.[25] The system was tested in July 1873 but after three years of delay it was abandoned.[26][27]

See also

References

  1. ^ Exposition Universelle de 1867 Catalogue Officiel des Exposants Récompesés (in French). Paris: Édouard Dentu. 1 July 1867. p. 41.
  2. ^ a b "Larmanjat's Single Rail Tramway". Engineering. Vol. IX. 20 May 1870. pp. 352, 354.
  3. ^ Cazeneuve, Albert (1879). "Locomotive a roue dentée mobile de M. J. Larmanjat". Les Chemins de Fer à l'Exposition Universelle (in French). Paris: Édition Guillaumin. p. 100.
  4. ^ Quetil, C. J. (29 April 1871). "Road With a Single Rail—Larmanjat's System". Railroad Gazette. Chicago. pp. 50–51.
  5. ^ Biele, J. (22 August 1868). "Le Nouveau Chemin de Fer du Raincy à Montfermeil". L'Illustration Journal Universel (in French). Vol. LII. pp. 125–126.
  6. OCLC 12197488
    .
  7. .
  8. ^ Athelstane, John (1880). Memoirs of Field Marshal the Duke of Saldanha. Vol. 2. London: John Murray. pp. 427–8.
  9. ^ "Money Market and City Intelligence". The Times. No. 27110. London. 8 July 1871. p. 7.
  10. ^ a b c "Railway and Other Companies". The Times. No. 27574. 31 December 1872. p. 4.
  11. ^ "Trial of Steam Tramways at Buckhurst Hill". The Canadian Patent Office Record and Mechanics' Magazine. Montreal: George Desbarats. March 1873. pp. 27–28.
  12. ^ "Buckhurst Hill". Railway Gazette. No. 77. 1943. p. 149.
  13. ^ "Steam Tramways in Lisbon". The Engineer. Vol. 35. George Riche. 10 January 1873. p. 18.
  14. OCLC 2753697.
  15. de Mendonça e Costa, Leonildo [in Portuguese] (21 April 1887). "Caminho de Ferro de Lisboa a Cintra" (PDF). O Occidente
. No. 300. Lisbon. pp. 91–94.
  • ^ Hemming, George (30 March 1876). "In re Lisbon Steam Tramways Company". Law Reports—Chancery. Vol. II. Incorporated Council of Law Reporting for England and Wales. p. 575.
  • ^ Moak, Nathaniel (1879). Reports of Cases Decided by the English Courts. Vol. 21. London: William Gould. p. 410.
  • Reynolds's News
    . 4 June 1876. p. 5.
  • ^ "Twycross v. Grant and others". The Law Reports: Common Pleas Division. Vol. II. London: Incorporated Council of Law Reporting for England and Wales. 2 June 1877. p. 469.
  • ^ "Twycross v. Grant the Lisbon Tramways case". Public Opinion. Vol. 30, no. 774. London. 22 July 1876. p. 90.
  • ^ des Sablons, Tarbé (5 October 1869). "Rapport de la Commission". Journal officiel de la République française (in French). Paris. p. 1308.
  • ^ Gallot, Albert (1 April 1874). "Rapports et délibérations" (in French). Auxerre: Conseil Général, Department de L'Yonne. p. 145.
  • "Decret concernant le chemin de fer au système Larmanjat entre Lausanne et Echallens". www.fedlex.admin.ch (in French). Lausanne: Swiss Federation. 6 June 1872.
  • Morandière, Jules (1876). "Abstractions of papers in foreign transactions"
  • . Minutes of Proceedings. Vol. XLVII. The Institution of Civil Engineers. p. 325. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  • ^ "Traction on Canals". Van Nostrand's Eclectic Engineering Magazine. Vol. 9, no. 55. July 1873. p. 14.
  • ^ "Steam Traction on Canals". The Practical Magazine. Vol. 5, no. 1. London: W. P. Bennett. 1875. p. 19.
  • ^ Head, John (8 April 1873). Forrest, James (ed.). "Steam locomotion on common roads". Minutes of Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. 36. London: Institution of Civil Engineers: 98.
  • Burgundy-Franche-Comté Region
    . Retrieved 26 April 2024.
  • ^ Caillaux, E. (1876). Bulletin des lois de la République française (in French). Paris: l'Imprimerie Nationale des Lois. p. 565.
  • External links

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