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Project VIMTO: A new system for the vibration and impact monitoring of tram operations

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Conference Object

Change log

Authors

Fidler, PRA 
Hartley, S 
Talbot, JP 

Abstract

Disturbance to building occupants caused by tram-generated ground-borne noise and vibration presents a significant barrier to the expansion of tram networks in our cities. Furthermore, such disturbance is often an indicator of deteriorating track infrastructure. Monitoring and understanding ground-borne noise and vibration is therefore a key priority for tram operators. Project VIMTO (Vibration and Impact Monitoring of Tram Operations) is concerned with developing a new system for monitoring vibration and impact of trams, whereby the vehicles themselves are used as the primary monitoring instrument. Low-cost vehicle-mounted instrumentation is being used to record axle-box vibration signatures, along with positioning data, to ‘map’ a tram network in terms of its propensity to generate vibration. Such mapping aims to offer near real-time continuous monitoring, enabling the formulation of more efficient, optimised maintenance strategies. This paper describes the current development system and presents some initial results from trials on the Midland Metro, UK.

Description

Keywords

Journal Title

SHMII 2017 - 8th International Conference on Structural Health Monitoring of Intelligent Infrastructure, Proceedings

Conference Name

The 8th International Conference on Structural Health Monitoring of Intelligent Infrastructure

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SHMII
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/I019308/1)
EPSRC (EP/K503757/1)
This work was funded by the EPSRC Impact Acceleration Account (Grant No. EP/K503757/1) and by the Cambridge Centre for Smart Infrastructure and Construction (EP/I019308/1).
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