Eschede derailment

Eschede derailment

The destruction of the rear passenger cars
Date 3 June 1998
Time 10:59
Location Eschede, Celle, Lower Saxony
61 km (38 mi) N from Hanover
Country Germany
Rail line Hanover–Hamburg
Operator Deutsche Bahn AG
Type of incident Derailment
Cause Wheel disintegration
Statistics
Trains 1
Passengers 287
Deaths 101
Injuries 88

The Eschede derailment occurred on 3 June 1998, near the village of Eschede in the Celle district of Lower Saxony, Germany, when a high-speed train derailed and crashed into a road bridge. 101 people died and around 100 were injured. It remains the worst rail disaster in the history of the Federal Republic of Germany and the worst high-speed-rail disaster worldwide. The cause was a single fatigue crack in one wheel which, when it finally failed, caused the train to derail at a set of points.

Chronology of events

Rear power car 401 551 of the crashed train.

Wheel fracture

Intercity-Express trainset 51 was travelling as ICE 884 "Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen" on the Munich to Hamburg route; the train was scheduled to stop at Augsburg, Nürnberg, Würzburg, Fulda, Kassel, Göttingen, and Hanover before reaching Hamburg.[1] After stopping in Hanover at 10:30, the train continued its journey northwards. About 130 kilometres (80 mi) and forty minutes away from Hamburg[1] and six kilometres south of central Eschede, near Celle, the steel tyre on a wheel on the third axle of the first car broke, peeled away from the wheel, and punctured the floor of the car, where it remained embedded.

What ensued was a series of events that occurred within minutes yet took investigators months to reconstruct. The tyre embedded in the rail car was seen by Jörg Dittmann, one of the passengers in Coach 1. The tyre went through an armrest between where his wife and son sat. Dittmann took his wife and son out of the damaged coach and went to inform a conductor in the third coach. The conductor, who noticed vibrations in the train, told Dittmann that company policy required him to investigate the circumstances before pulling the emergency brake. The conductor took one minute to go to the site in Coach 1. According to Dittmann, the train had begun to sway from side to side by then. The conductor did not show a willingness to stop the train immediately at that point and wished to investigate the incident more thoroughly. The crash occurred just when Dittmann was about to show the armrest puncture to the conductor.[1]

Derailment

As the train passed over the first of two points, the embedded tyre slammed against the guide rail of the points, pulling it from the railway ties. This guide rail also penetrated the floor of the car, becoming embedded in the vehicle and lifting the axle carriage off the rails. At 10:59 local time (08:59 UTC), one of the now-derailed wheels struck the points lever of the second switch, changing its setting. The rear axles of car number 3 were switched onto a parallel track, and the entire car was thereby thrown into the piers supporting a 300-tonne roadway overpass, destroying them.

Car number 4, likewise derailed by the violent deviation of car number 3 and still travelling at 200 kilometres per hour (125 mph), passed intact under the bridge and rolled onto the embankment immediately behind it. Two Deutsche Bahn railway workers who had been working near the bridge were killed instantly when the derailed car crushed them. The breaking of the car couplings caused the automatic emergency brakes to engage and the mostly undamaged first three cars came to a stop. The detached front power car came to a stop after passing the Eschede train station, three kilometers (two miles) farther along the track.

Bridge collapse

Coaches one and two cleared the bridge. Coach three hit the bridge, which began to collapse. Coach four cleared the bridge, moved away from the track, and hit a group of trees. The bridge pieces crushed the rear half of coach five. The restaurant coach, six, was crushed to a 15 cm (6 in) height. With the track now obstructed completely by the collapsed bridge, the remaining cars jackknifed into the rubble in a zig-zag pattern: Cars 7, the service car, the three first-class cars numbered 10 to 12, and the rear power car all derailed and slammed into the pile.[1] The resulting mess was likened to a partially collapsed folding ruler. An automobile was also found in the wreckage. It belonged to the two railway technicians and was probably parked on the bridge before the accident.[1]

Power car 401 051 of the crashed train sustained minor damage. It is still in use (Munich, August 2007).

The crash produced a sound that witnesses later described as "startling", "horribly loud", and "like a plane crash". Nearby residents, alerted by the sound, were the first to arrive at the scene. Erika Karl, the first person to walk into the accident scene, photographed the accident site. Karl said that, upon hearing the noise, her husband believed initially that the accident was an aircraft accident. After the accident, eight of the ICE carriages occupied an area slightly longer than the length of a single carriage.[1]

At 11:02, the local police declared an emergency; at 11:07, as the magnitude of the disaster quickly became apparent, this was elevated to "major emergency"; and at 12:30 the Celle district government declared a "catastrophic emergency" (civil state of emergency). More than 1000 rescue workers from regional emergency services, fire departments, rescue services, the police and army were dispatched. Some 37 emergency physicians, who happened to be attending a professional conference in nearby Hanover, also provided assistance during the early hours of the rescue effort, as did units of the British Forces Germany.

While the driver and many passengers in the front part of the train survived, there was little chance of survival for those in the rear carriages, which crashed into the concrete bridge pile at a speed of 200 km/h (120 mph). Including the two railway workers who had been standing under the bridge, 101 people died. ICE 787 had passed under the bridge going in the opposite direction (on the Hamburg to Hanover route) only two minutes earlier.

By 13:45 authorities gave emergency treatment to 87 people. 27 of the most severely injured passengers boarded airlifts for hospitalisation.[1]

Accident statistics

Causes

Remains of a VW Golf Variant, belonging to the two railway workers killed in the crash, were found beneath the debris of the crashed ICE. Media first speculated that the train had derailed after a collision with the car,[2] a circumstance that caused a train to jackknife in the Ufton Nervet rail crash six years later; however, this theory was quickly dismissed as the front power car did not receive any damage at all.

Wheel design

The ICE 1 trains were originally equipped with single-cast wheelsets, known as Monobloc wheels. Once in service it soon became apparent that this design could, as a result of metal fatigue and out-of-round conditions, result in resonance and vibration at cruising speed. Passengers noticed this particularly in the restaurant car, where there were reports of loud vibrations in the dinnerware and of glasses "creeping" across tables.

Managers in the railway organisation had experienced these severe vibrations on a trip and asked to have the problem solved. In response engineers decided that to solve the problem, the suspension of ICE cars could be improved with the use of a rubber damping ring between the rail-contacting steel tyre and the steel wheel body. A similar design had been employed successfully in trams (known as resilient wheels), at significantly lower speeds. This new wheel, dubbed a "wheel-tyre" design, consisted of a wheel body surrounded by a 20 mm thick rubber damper and then a relatively thin metal tyre. The new design was not tested at high speed before it was made operational, but was successful at resolving the issue of vibration at cruising speeds.

At the time, no facilities existed in Germany that could test the actual failure limit of the wheels, and so complete prototypes were never tested physically. The design and specification relied greatly on available materials data and theory. The very few laboratory and rail tests that were performed did not measure wheel behaviour with extended wear conditions or speeds greater than normal cruising. Nevertheless, over a period of years the wheels proved themselves apparently reliable and, until the accident, had not caused any major problems.

In July 1997, nearly one year before the disaster, Üstra, the company that operates Hanover's tram network, discovered fatigue cracks in dual block wheels on trams running at about 24 km/h (15 mph). It began changing wheels before fatigue cracks could develop, much earlier than was legally required by the specification. Üstra reported its findings in a warning to all other users of wheels built with similar designs, including Deutsche Bahn, in autumn 1997. According to Üstra, Deutsche Bahn replied by stating that they had not noticed problems in their trains.[1]

The Fraunhofer Institute was charged with the task of determining the cause of the accident. It was revealed later that the institute had told the DB management as early as 1992 about its concerns about possible wheel-tyre failure.

It was soon apparent that dynamic repetitive forces had not been accounted for in the statistical failure modelling done during the design phase, and the resulting design lacked an adequate margin of safety. The following factors, overlooked during design, were noted:

  1. The tyres were flattened into an ellipse as the wheel turned through each revolution (approximately 500,000 times during a typical day in service on an ICE train), with corresponding fatigue effects.
  2. In contrast to the monobloc wheel design, cracks could also form on the inside of the tyre.
  3. As the tyre became thinner due to wear, the dynamic forces were exaggerated, resulting in crack growth.
  4. Flat spots and ridges or swells in the tyre dramatically increased the dynamic forces on the assembly and greatly accelerated wear.

Failure to stop train

Failing to stop the train permitted the wheel to disintegrate, resulting in a catastrophic series of events. Had the train been stopped immediately it is unlikely that the subsequent events would have occurred.

Valuable time was lost when Dittmann tried to warn the train crew about the large piece of metal coming up through the floor, instead of pulling the emergency brake himself. The train manager refused to stop the train until he had investigated the problem himself, saying this was company policy. This decision was upheld in court, absolving the train manager of all charges. Given that he was a customer service employee and not a train maintainer or engineer, he had no more authority to make an engineering judgement about whether or not to stop the train than the passenger anyway.

Maintenance

About the time of the disaster, the technicians at Deutsche Bahn's maintenance facility in Munich used only standard flashlights for visual inspection of the tyres, instead of metal fatigue detection equipment.[3] Previously, advanced testing machines had been used; however, as the equipment generated many false positive error messages, it was considered unreliable and its use was discontinued. During the week prior to the Eschede disaster, three separate automated checks indicated that a wheel was defective. Investigators discovered, from a maintenance report generated by the train's on-board computer, that two months prior to the Eschede disaster, conductors and other train staff filed eight separate complaints about the noises and vibrations generated from the bogie with the defective wheel; the company did not replace the wheel. Deutsche Bahn said that its inspections were proper at the time and that the engineers could not have predicted the wheel fracture.[1]

Other factors

The design of the overbridge may have also contributed to the accident because it had two thin piers holding up the bridge on either side, instead of the spans going from solid abutments to solid abutments. The Granville train disaster of 1977 had a similar weakness in its bridge. The bridge built after the disaster is a cantilevered design and does not have this vulnerability. However, though it is practical to mandate that new bridges should be designed to resist collapsing in the event of an impact, it would be of questionable practicability to mandate the replacement of all existing bridges with the old design.

Another contributing factor is the use of welds in the carriage bodies that "unzipped" during the crash.[4]

In summary, though the disintegrated resilient wheel was the root cause of the accident, the damage was as severe as it was due to a number of factors including the proximity to the bridge and flipping point as well as the position of the wheel on the front-end train leading to a large number of cars derailing.

Consequences

An ICE window pane.

Legal

Immediately after the accident, Deutsche Bahn paid 30,000 Deutsche Mark (about 19,000 United States dollars) for each fatality to the applicable families. At a later time Deutsche Bahn settled with some victims. Deutsche Bahn stated that it paid an equivalent of more than 30 million U.S. dollars to the families of victims and survivors.[1]

In August 2002, two Deutsche Bahn officials and one engineer were charged with manslaughter. The trial lasted 53 days with expert witnesses from around the world testifying.

The case ended in a plea bargain in April 2003. According to the German code of criminal procedure, if the defendant has not been found to bear substantial guilt, and if the state attorney and the defendant agree, the defendant may pay a fine and the criminal proceedings are dismissed with prejudice and without a verdict. Each engineer paid 10,000 euros (around 12,000 USD).[1]

Technical

Within weeks, all wheels of similar design were replaced with monobloc wheels. The entire German railway network was checked for similar arrangements of switches close to possible obstacles.

Rescue workers at the crash site experienced considerable difficulties in cutting their way through the train to gain access to the victims. Both the aluminium framework and the pressure-proof windows offered unexpected resistance to rescue equipment. As a result, all trains were refitted with windows that have predetermined breaking seams.

Memorial

Official memorial site next to the bridge, with the railway line in the background.
Memorial with the names of the victims.
Memento

Udo Bauch, a survivor who became disabled by the accident, built his own memorial with his own money. Bauch said that the chapel received 5,000 to 6,000 visitors per year. One year after Bauch's memorial was built, an official memorial, funded partly by Deutsche Bahn, was established.[1]

The official memorial was opened on 11 May 2001[5] in the presence of 400 relatives as well as many dignitaries, rescuers and citizens from Eschede. The memorial consists of 101 Wild Cherry trees each representing one fatality. The trees have been planted along the rails near the bridge and with the switch in front. From the field a staircase leads up to the street and a gate - on the other side of the street a number stairs lead further up to nowhere.[6] There is an inscription on the side of the stone gate and an inscription on a memorial wall that also lists the names of the fatalities placed at the center of the trees.

text on the gate:
Am 3. Juni 1998 um 10:58 Uhr zerschellte
an dieser Stelle der ICE 884 „Wilhelm-
Conrad-Röntgen“. 101 Menschen verloren
ihr Leben, ganze Familien wurden zerstört;
mehr als hundert Reisende wurden schwer
verletzt, viele tragen lebenslang an den
Folgen. Das Unglück hat die menschliche
Zerbrechlichkeit, Vergänglichkeit und
Unzulänglichkeit gezeigt. Beispielhaft und
aufopfernd haben Retter, Helfer und
Bürger des Ortes selbstlos eine schwere
Aufgabe angenommen, haben geholfen
und getröstet. Durch ihren Einsatz ist
Eschede auch ein Ort der Solidarität und
gelebter Mitmenschlichkeit geworden.[7]
text on the memorial:
Der Lebensweg dieser 101 Menschen
endete in der Zugkatastrophe von
Eschede.
Auf unergründliche Weise kreuzten und
vollendeten sich hier ihre Schicksale.
In das Leid und die Trauer um die
geliebten Menschen mischt sich
Dankbarkeit, ihnen im Leben nahe
gewesen zu sein.
Trost ist die Hoffnung:
Sie ruhen in Gottes Hand.[8]

1897 train accident

A previous fatal train accident occurred at Eschede on 4 August 1897; the express train from Hamburg derailed causing 3 fatalities and 20 severe injuries.[9]

See also

References

Numbered References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "Derailment at Eschede" ("High Speed Train Wreck"). Seconds From Disaster.
  2. Heimsuchung im High-Tech-Land. In: Der Spiegel. No. 23, 1998, p. 22–34.
  3. 090120 NGC Seconds from the catastrophe
  4. Modern Railways, December 2004, p16)
  5. Meldung Gedenkstätte Eschede eingeweiht. In: Eisenbahn-Revue International, Heft 8-9/2001, ISSN 1421-2811, S. 341.
  6. http://www.eschede.de/geschichte/ice-unglueck/ein-gang.html
  7. Translation : On 3 June 1998 at 10:58 a.m. the ICE 884 [train named] "Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen" crashed at this point. 101 people lost their lives; whole families were destroyed; more than a hundred passengers were seriously injured, many will bear the consequences for the rest of their lives. The accident showed that humans are fragile, transient, and weak. With exemplary sacrifice, rescuers, other helpers, and citizens selflessly undertook a difficult task; they helped and comforted. Through their efforts, Eschede has become a place of solidarity and living brotherhood.
  8. Translation : The path through life of these 101 people ended with the rail disaster in Eschede. In an inscrutable way, their fates crossed and ended here. With the sorrow and grief for these loved ones is mixed gratitude to have been close to them in life. Consoling is the hope that they rest in God's hands.
  9. Drögemüller, Klaus: Eschede. Bilder aus alter Zeit. Horb. 1986. ISBN 3-924932-49-2).

Further reading

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eschede train disaster.

Coordinates: 52°44′04″N 010°13′13″E / 52.73444°N 10.22028°E / 52.73444; 10.22028

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.