- Russian gauge
In
railway terminology , Russian gauge refers torailway track with a gauge between 1519 mm and 1525 mm [http://www.parovoz.com/spravka/gauges-en.php Paravoz] , retrieved 2008-07-20.] . In a narrow sense as defined byRussian Railways it refers to RailGauge|1520 gaugeRussian Railways , [http://eng.rzd.ru/wps/portal/rzdeng?STRUCTURE_ID=223 Broad Gauge Track-1520] , retrieved 2008-07-20.] .The primary installed base of Russian gauge is across the states of the former Soviet Union (
CIS states andBaltic states ),Mongolia andFinland , representing ca. 225,000 km of track. The Russian gauge is the second most widely used gauge in the world—afterstandard gauge .History
RailGauge|1524 was approved as the new standard on
September 12 1842 .The selection process for the gauge was undertaken chiefly by Colonel
Pavel Petrovich Melnikov (1804–1880). Probably, a combination of the following arguments was used:* Easier construction of locomotivesFact|date=July 2008
* Better stability
* Wide gauge was seen as a new standard that was emerging in theUnited States Fact|date=July 2008
* Since the gauge was wider than standard road track it was easier to use horse carriages for railroad construction and maintenance.Fact|date=July 2008
* Defensive concernsIn the 19th century,
Imperial Russia chose a gauge broader thanstandard gauge . It is widely believed that the choice was made for military reasons, to prevent potential invaders from using the Russian rail system. Others point out that no clear standard had emerged by 1842.Engineer
Pavel Melnikov hiredGeorge Washington Whistler , a prominent American railroad engineer (and father of the artistJames McNeill Whistler ), to be a consultant on the building of Russia's first major railroad, theMoscow –Saint Petersburg line. The selection of RailGauge|1500 gauge was recommended by German and Austrian engineers but not adopted: it was not the same as the RailGauge|1524 gauge in common use in the southern United States at the time. Now Russia and most of the former Russian Empire, including theBaltic state s,Ukraine ,Belarus , the Caucasian and Central Asian republics, andMongolia , have the Russian gauge of RailGauge|1520, 4 mm (frac|5|32in) narrower than RailGauge|1524, thoughrolling stock of both gauges is interchangeable in practice. Exceptionally, the railroad system onSakhalin Island remains to the Japanese standard 1067mm gauge, as originally built.George Washington Whistler was invited as a foreign expert to assist in railroad construction. He was a proponent of a wider gauge and his efforts helped in lobbying the new standard. It is quite likely that an "invasion" argument (alleging that it is easier to adapt trains to narrow gauge than to broad gauge) was used in lobbying the project since military was closely supervising the construction; however, it is highly unlikely that such an argument was made by Melnikov during the actual selection process.Nazi Germany suffered such problems with theirsupply line s during World War II as a result of thebreak-of-gauge .Although broad gauge was and is quite rare on lighter railways and street
tram ways, many tramways in ex-USSR were and are also built to broad gauge (according to terminology in use in these countries, gauges narrower than RailGauge|1520 are considered to be narrow). The formerSoviet Union is today the largest operator of first generation tramways in the world, and has been for many years. The Saint Petersburg, Russia tramway network is entirely broad gauge, with some of the world's widest trams, and indeed the widest in Europe (European trams are generally narrower than European buses and trains and also tramcars elsewhere such as America andAustralia ).Redefinitions
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.