South Konkan Outing 17th/18th April 2008.

IRFCA does the tallest and the longest in a single day! The Konkan Railways (KR) section near Ratnagiri (RN) has some the grandest sights on the Indian Railways. These sights are of course the Panval Viaduct and the Karbude Tunnel which are are IR's tallest viaduct and longest tunnel respectively. Once completed, the route in Kashmir would have even taller/longer structures, but as of today, Pavnal and Karbude are the champions, handling an endless traffic of fast, heavy trains. This is a joint presentation by Lalam, Hrishikesh, Sachin and Apurva. Poor quality images would be deleted once better pictures of the area are available.

Date: 2008-04-26
Owner: Gallery Administrator
Size: 54 items
PanvalViaductMM18thApril2008

After a long wait in the hot, humid weather this pair of Erode shed WDG3A hauled BOXN rake arrived from the portals of the Tike tunnel towards Ratnagiri.

BOXNPanvalViaductD18thApril2008

Another look at the BOXN rake from a different angle. As the wind was flowing in the other direction, we could not hear this train coming. But we did see a rapidly rising puff of smoke from the distance, where the train might have entered the Tike tunnel.

PanvalViaductB18thApril2008

The mineral in the BOXN was about a meter deep, yet the locos had to struggle to get this rake going. What a fabulous sound this pair of locos were making.

JSPanval1ViaductD18thApril2008

We had a train to catch in the afternoon so we waited for one last train which was the 2051 Jan Shatabdi to Madgaon. The ED shed WDM 3D # 11106 just rocketed the tiny rake past our location. 18th April 2008.

JSPanval2ViaductD18thApril2008

The 2051 rake is an assortment of JS type coaches of different batches. This is the fastest train on the Konkan Railways. 18th April 2008.

PanvalViaductC18thApril2008

The tiny 2051 rake fits on the Panval Viaduct. 18th April 2008.

JS

Another view of the 2051 rake. 18th April 2008.

JSPanvalViaductD18thApril2008

2051 rake seen from the top of the Tike tunnel. 18th April 2008.

RMV5404_BOKE_18thApril2008

We now move to Bhoke (code BOKE) station which is located 7 kms north of Ratnagiri. This station is near the southern portal of the longest tunnel on the IR, the 6.5 Km long Karbude tunnel. View the satellite map [url=http://www.wikimapia.org/#lat=17.0518

0946ERS_BVC_boke_18thApril2008

As we arrive at Bhoke, the Ernakulam - Bhavnagar weekly express passes with Bhagat ki Kothi (BGKT) shed's WDM3A # 16276R. As with many KR stations, the platform is located lower or higher than the surrounding level. A motorized vehicle cannot go beyond th

Karbude_18thApril2008

The south portal of 6.5 Km long Karbude tunnel. This is the longest working tunnel on the Indian Railways. The tunnel has three ventilation shafts with blowers and control rooms placed equidistant at the top. The control rooms turn on the powerful blowers

Inside Karbude

The tunnel has a low maintenance ballast-less track where the rails are set in a bed of concrete. When we visited the tunnel, it resembled a workshop with sounds of grinding, welding and other shop floor activity due to maintenance work inside. The tunnel

ControlPhoneKarbude18thApril2008

A line phone that is provided to all the people working along the track. Sockets for this phone are available every 200 meters inside the tunnels. 18th April 2008

ControlPhoneStationsKarbude18thApril2008

The line phone shown above is plugged into these stations. The blue box connects to Bhoke station while the red box connects to the Karbude tunnel control directly. This ensures that the messages are passed with the minimum delay. Bhoke station has facil

trolley_outside_Karbude

Simple implements like this trolley are used to carry maintenance material from Bhoke station to the Karbude tunnel. 18th April 2008.

Comments
(view all 12 comments)
Great work guys, as usual!
Posted by Mohan Bhuyan on 2008 Jun 13 16:37:39 +0100
Dear Appu & gang,

Aur ek baar Mere saath.:-)
Posted by V. Srinavasa Prasad on 2008 May 02 17:46:22 +0100
Hats off to you folks...And Three Cheers to IRFCA...Long Live Railfans!
Posted by Saurab Basu on 2008 May 01 17:08:44 +0100