Indian Railways News => | Topic started by Mafia on Nov 24, 2012 - 18:01:13 PM |
Title - Bridge legs suffer water bite- ‘5 to 6 per cent corrosion’ near base, warn expertsPosted by : Mafia on Nov 24, 2012 - 18:01:13 PM |
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Howrah bridge is not falling down, but the four legs that hold it up are corroding fast.The cantilever bridge stands on four 80ft limbs buried on either side of the Hooghly and seeping water has already bitten off some of its steel in 69 years.“There has been 5 to 6 per cent corrosion of the anchors up to 10 metres (or 33ft) from the base underground. If we don’t act immediately, the safety of the bridge will be seriously compromised,” D.D.N. Singh, the scientist who had led a team that went underground to study the damage, told Metro.He is the chief scientist and head of corrosion and surface engineering at the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research — National Metallurgical Laboratory, Jamshedpur.“The only time the bases of these pillars were painted with anti-corrosion chemicals was when the bridge was built in 1943. Since then, no protective coating has been applied or major maintenance work undertaken,” Singh added.The custodian of the bridge, Calcutta Port Trust, has painted the visible part “every seven-eight years” but allegedly neglected the crucial support underground.There, the pillars made of 32mm thick carbon manganese steel sheets brought from England are under water for most of the year. Singh said it was almost knee-deep when he went down in May. His team’s study revealed the pillars had suffered corrosion of up to 1.5mm. |