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Monthly Archives

April 2022

Increasing the Safety of Coupled Trams – Trial of Digital Transit’s New Thermal Vision System

Digital Transit Limited, in partnership with Ian Rowe Associates Ltd, are working on the future of safety on Manchester trams.

Recent incidents have brought the issue of coupled tram safety to public attention in Manchester and to the Rail Regulator. Examples of this include a viral video of a man tram surfing between two carriages on the Metrolink in Rochdale who, whilst not injured, was still putting himself and others at great risk. Another example is a man in Manchester who fell in the gap between two coupled trams at a tram stop.

DTL are performing a feasibility study to determine whether a system comprising a thermal camera and image processing software can reliably detect when a person is in a position of danger between the two trams, and whether they are ‘tram surfing’ on the coupling or have fallen into the gap created by the platform and the tapered front of the trams.

This study is part of a larger project by Ian Rowe Associates Ltd to determine the optimal method by which to detect people falling into the gap between two coupled trams and tram surfing. This will be tested with a variety of tools including smart cameras and LiDAR. The project will use both computer simulations as well as real-world testing to evaluate the different vision options. The ultimate goal is to have a system which lowers the risk of double trams to be equivalent to the risk level of single trams.

At the Trafford tram depot in Manchester, DTL had access to a tram for two days, including a driver. Two cameras were set up, one on each side of the coupling. Footage was recorded from various angles and positions, and at different times throughout the day. All this footage will be used to produce a vision system that can detect people between the trams.

A preliminary version of this system was tested, and the results can be seen below.

Digital Transit look forward to further developing this technology, with aims to integrate this system across the Metrolink fleet.

EN50126, EN50128 and EN50129 Training by Digital Transit Limited for Irish Rail

Digital Transit have been in Dublin for the last three weeks, presenting each week a 3 day “Rail Engineering and Design Safety Management (EDSM) according to EN50126/8/9” course, as well as a one-day “Safety Critical Software in Rail (SCSR)” course to Irish Rail. These courses help attendees expand their knowledge and make better decisions around the standards and their application in the area of railway safety and software, deployment costs, and assist in de-risking the development lifecycle.

The modules are presented to a new group each week, and cover a wide range of modules including:
·      Case Studies of accidents related to design and inadequate EDSM
·      Standards for engineering safety and assessing and reducing risk including the latest EN50126 and EN50129
·      Railway systems engineering, integration and the new digital railway
·      The Scope of EN50128 and EN50567 for software.

The training will be adapted to meet Irish Rail’s specific requirements, taking into account feedback received from previous iterations of the course.

Click here for more information about the various training courses DTL provides.