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    • Area available for a walkway

      • The "cess" shown each side of the alignment is the area available for a walkway or refuge for staff working on the track.
      www.railway-technical.com/infrastructure/track-basics-v2.pdf
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  2. safety.networkrail.co.uk › jargon-buster › cessCESS - Safety Central

    May 16, 2016 · cess The area either side of the railway immediately off the ballast shoulder. This usually provides a safe area for authorised workers to stand when trains approach.

    • Jargon Buster

      Jargon Buster. The jargon buster aims to give simple, plain...

  3. safety.networkrail.co.uk › tools-resources › jargonJargon Buster - Safety Central

    Jargon Buster. The jargon buster aims to give simple, plain English explanations of typical words and phrases used in the rail industry – to help us all understand what we read or hear day-to-day. If you’ve heard a word or phrase you don’t know, check to see if it’s on the list below.

  4. This article contains a list of jargon used to varying degrees by railway enthusiasts, trainspotters, and railway employees in the United Kingdom, including nicknames for various locomotives and multiple units.

  5. Personal Track Safety, known as PTS, is a qualification required by people who –. Go on a line. Go within 3 metres (10 feet) of on or near the line. Carry out engineering or technical work on a platform within 1.25 metres (4 feet) of its edge. ucture who have a Track Visitor Permit. It also contains usefu. The handbook does not cover –.

  6. Aug 6, 2017 · Basically, the cess is the area on either side of the track, incorporating drainage from the ballasted area. Beneath the ballast is an impervious layer, traditionally clay but today more likely to be plastic sheeting, to prevent rainwater penetrating the substructure and weakening it. The layer is profiled to drain water into the cess.

  7. This picture shows the terms used to describe parts of the railway – the cess is the area alongside the railway the four-foot is the space between the running rails of one line

  8. Jul 2, 2020 · Traditional cess drains. Current trackside drainage is reliant on cess drains, consisting of cut trenches, filled with crushed stone, below the sleeper level, either side of the track.

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