Skip to main content

Rideau Transit Maintenance continues to investigate cause of axle failure on LRT car on Aug. 8

A look at the LRT train that derailed near Tunney's Pasture on Aug. 8. (Photo courtesy: City of Ottawa) A look at the LRT train that derailed near Tunney's Pasture on Aug. 8. (Photo courtesy: City of Ottawa)
Share
OTTAWA -

Rideau Transit Maintenance and Alstom are still trying to figure out why an axle bearing assembly failed, causing an LRT train to derail near Tunney’s Pasture station six weeks ago.

“We’re still not at the point where we can definitely say why that nut came loose,” said RTM chief executive officer Mario Guerra. “That we don’t know yet.”

On Aug. 8, the axle of an LRT car became “dislodged” from the track, shutting down the Confederation Line from Blair Road to Tunney’s Pasture.

There were no passengers onboard the train at the time of the incident.

Councillors were told in August that the root cause investigation identified a fault within the axle bearing assembly, causing the wheel to detach from the axle and derail.

The investigation found the “green section of the bolt, which should be completely tightened, had a very small amount of movement by fractions of a millimeter.” The movement caused damage to bearings inside the unit and wheel, leading to the wheel/axle coming off the track.

During Monday’s Transit Commission meeting, Director of Transit Operations Troy Charter told commissioners that Alstom and RTM continue to focus on what caused the axle and bearing to fail, “and establish the permanent fix.”

All O-Train LRT cars were inspected, with nine additional O-Train vehicle pulled out of service for additional analysis of the axle.

Charter says vehicle inspections will continue on all LRT vehicles to ensure “safe operation of the fleet” and will continue until a permanent fix is identified and in place.

Alstom has identified additional tools to help diagnose pre-cursor symptoms that vehicles may exhibit through monitoring software, said Charter.

Thirty-eight of the 39 rail cars have been inspected. The remaining car is out of service for unrelated repairs.

Coun. Jeff Leiper asked Rideau Transit Maintenance about the inspection of the axle when it arrived in Ottawa.

Guerra said the axle was pre-assembled in Europe.

“The assembly comes pre-assembled as a unit. The assembly would have been inspected by Alstom in Europe before shipping to North America.”

The Transportation Safety Board was notified about the derailment, and was looking into the incident.

TIMELINE OF EVENTS

OC Transpo provided a timeline of events on Aug. 8

  • 8:30 p.m. – an out-of-service train leaving Tunney’s Pasture Station experienced an “abnormal ride” as it was being returned to Belfast Yard.
  • Event was reported immediately; train stopped and inspected
  • At approximately 8:45 p.m. inspection found one axle out of 10 off the rail
  • Service Command Centre was activated at 11 p.m. as a proactive precautionary measure in the event the incident would affect service in the morning
  • Following the end of daily service as work commenced to rerail the train, an issue with the wheel/axle was identified.
  • At approximately 3:30 a.m. Alstom notified the city that the entire fleet would require inspection prior to resuming Line 1 service

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Hertz CEO out following electric car 'horror show'

The company, which announced in January it was selling 20,000 of the electric vehicles in its fleet, or about a third of the EVs it owned, is now replacing the CEO who helped build up that fleet, giving it the company’s fifth boss in just four years.

Stay Connected