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Bullet-train planners face huge engineering challenge

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The price tags partly reflect the need for speed. Northbound bullet trains are supposed to accelerate to close to their top 220 mph speed as they pull out of Union Station. They will have to maintain that pace all the way to San Jose to fulfill a legal mandate that trains reach San Francisco in less than two hours and 40 minutes.

At that speed, turns must be gentle, avoiding the radical twists and turns of Hood’s creation — including the famous Tehachapi Loop, a giant circle of track that ascends 77 feet around a hill. Union Pacific’s locomotive engineers have to slow to just 23 mph in many places.

The high-speed rail authority envisions a much straighter route. Depending on the slope of the track, the tallest viaduct could be 200 to 330 feet off the ground.

The same holds true for the segment through the San Gabriel Mountains, roughly following California 14. The current tracks, also constructed by Southern Pacific in the 1870s but now owned by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, twist and turn too much for bullet trains. A more direct route would include an eight-mile-long tunnel under the canyons of Santa Clarita.

Where the bullet train enters the Los Angeles Basin, tracks would run next to Metrolink’s existing northeast San Fernando Valley route, requiring the removal of some businesses and possibly homes.

While large by Southern California standards, the planned structures and tunnels won’t set any world records. Switzerland is building a 35.4-mile rail tunnel under the Alps. And China has a highway bridge 1,627 feet high.

California’s bullet train will have to operate over some of the nation’s most seismically active terrain, and Gillam acknowledges that big quakes could cause a derailment.

There are half a dozen faults between Bakersfield and Los Angeles, including the White Wolf and San Andreas, both capable of producing a 7.5-magnitude quake. Where high viaducts are near faults, engineers are considering reinforced concrete structures that would resist ground motion and have containment features to prevent a derailed bullet train from plunging to the ground, Gillam said.

The problem involves more than just shaking. Where the rail line would cross the San Andreas fault near Palmdale, for example, an earthquake could leave rails laterally separated by 20 feet. A sophisticated shut-down system would slow trains in minor quakes and activate an emergency stop in major quakes. At full speed, however, a bullet train would need four to five miles to make an emergency stop on level ground, and longer going downhill.

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