Laboratory Investigation on Seams between Rails and Hardened Fine-grained, as well as Hadfield Steel Plates with Manual Arc Welding
Brautigam, András
Szalai, Szabolcs
Légmán, Nikoletta
Fischer, Szabolcs
2025-08-06T13:18:19Z
2025-08-06T13:18:19Z
2025
1785-8860
hu_HU
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14044/32011
In the last decade, hardened fine-grained plate components have been used in
turnouts and crossings on Western European urban rail networks, as well as in Hungary, in
place of traditional rail or Hadfield steel components. The first crossing was built in Hungary
in 2016. These components have many advantages, such as the ease with which they can be
machined in the factory; they are less prone to cracking than rails due to their block design
(high load-bearing cross-section); however, their weldability to rails and lifetime
repairability present numerous challenges for railway turnout manufacturers and operators.
There have been numerous studies on joint and repair welding of rails and hardened fine-
grained materials, but there is little or no information available on joint welding with manual
arc welding of these two different materials. The current study aims to investigate the welds
of coated electrode manual arc welding of rails (R260 and R400 HT) and hardened fine-
grained plates (in this case, Hardox 500) under non-laboratory conditions while strictly
adhering to technological specifications, in comparison to manual arc welding of rails and
Hadfield steels. Laboratory tests included raw material chemical composition, macroscopic
tests, micro-hardness measurements, tensile, shear, and bending tests.
hu_HU
dc.format
PDF
hu_HU
en
hu_HU
Laboratory Investigation on Seams between Rails and Hardened Fine-grained, as well as Hadfield Steel Plates with Manual Arc Welding
hu_HU
Open access
hu_HU
Óbudai Egyetem
hu_HU
Budapest
hu_HU
Óbudai Egyetem
hu_HU
Műszaki tudományok - anyagtudományok és technológiák