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Access is no problem for the trace heating idea. You can use a motorised crawler to walk up the cables, or hoist a bloke up with a rope. Much better than dismantling and rebuilding the anchorages: "if it ain't broke, don't fix it"!
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/04/2021 20:21:33So, the simple design would work OK as long as someone checked the weather forecast.No. Someone "checked the weather forecast" on the Titanic.
So, the simple design would work OK as long as someone checked the weather forecast.
Quote from: Peter Dow on 24/04/2021 20:50:29Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/04/2021 20:21:33So, the simple design would work OK as long as someone checked the weather forecast.No. Someone "checked the weather forecast" on the Titanic.That doesn't make any real sense.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/04/2021 21:38:24Quote from: Peter Dow on 24/04/2021 20:50:29Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/04/2021 20:21:33So, the simple design would work OK as long as someone checked the weather forecast.No. Someone "checked the weather forecast" on the Titanic.That doesn't make any real sense.Having "someone checking the weather forecast" isn't a foolproof recipe for avoiding dangerous problems with ice, whether that's ice falling from a bridge or an iceberg a liner steams full speed into.In order to have systems that work and are foolproof there needs to be a lot more complexity than you suggest.
And what you propose would add even more complexity.
Unless you plan to leave your system heating the wires all summer, it also needs to look at the weather forecast.
You need something more complex, more automated, more foolproof than that.
Sure. Complexity is good.
Quote from: Peter Dow on 24/04/2021 22:30:06You need something more complex, more automated, more foolproof than that.The word you need is "reliable". There is a complex, automated, foolproof system to prevent the 737MAX from stalling on rotation. So far it has killed around 350 people.
Quote from: Peter Dow on 24/04/2021 22:30:06Sure. Complexity is good.No.Just , no..It's also a pity that you didn't understand that I was kidding when I said it should be a person who checked the weather.People are extremely complicated and dreadfully unreliable. That was part of my point.
My point was that there isn't a need to heat the cables quickly, because the forecast (or even the current temperature and rate of change) will let you turn on the heating in good time. (And you would need to do that, no matter what heating system you used.)And, since the "big selling point" of your complicated system is that it is quick, -which isn't necessary- your system is,as I said, overly complicated.
The UK has an unreliable Prime Minister whose foolish misgovernment of the pandemic so far has killed around 120,000+ British people.
In the early days of manned space flight, NASA spent huge sums designing a pen that could write in zero-g, and freeze-dried food that could be reconstituted with hot water in a pouch. The Russians used pencils and sandwiches.
I hate to be a kill joy, but what about a mesh grid sloped above the road, it would reflect the ice and let the wind pass ?
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 26/04/2021 02:21:09I hate to be a kill joy, but what about a mesh grid sloped above the road, it would reflect the ice and let the wind pass ?A reasonable suggestion but1. A large part of the reason for building a bridge rather than a tunnel is for the architectural art of it - the form, not just the function. No doubt many would object to a net in that it would "spoil the look of the bridge", especially when that net got dirty with bird droppings, wind-blown garbage - plastic bags etc. There may not be suitable anchor points to attach the net in the correct position and so adding these may be glaring bolt-ons which again may detract from the bridge as art. The ice net would serve as a constant visual reminder not of the wisdom of the Scots as bridge-builders but as a reminder of the error of the Scots in the initial mistake in not designing to prevent ice fall from the beginning. Whereas my solution once completed is pretty much invisible from the outside.2. How big would be mesh be? Too big and dangerous lumps of ice could fall through, too small and it could ice up, form a ice sheet which would present a wind loading problem.
Or you can use a plastic boot and blow hot air up the tube.
What is the corrosion danger from electrically charging a bridge structure ?
How do they do it for power lines ?
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 29/04/2021 03:55:36 How do they do it for power lines ?Often by ... coating the lines in plastic.With some power lines they use air as the insulator but that's not a problem. To get electrolytic corrosion, bot polarities ( + and - ) must be in the same body of water.