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Spain Officials Quit Over Trains That Were Too Wide For Tunnels (bbc.com) 120

WmHBlair writes: Two top Spanish transport officials have resigned over a botched order for new commuter trains that cost nearly $275m. The trains could not fit into non-standard tunnels in the northern regions of Asturias and Cantabria. The head of Spain's rail operator Renfe, Isaias Taboas, and the Secretary of State for Transport, Isabel Pardo de Vera, have now left their roles. The design fault was made public earlier this month. The Spanish government says the mistake was spotted early enough to avoid financial loss. However the region of Cantabria has demanded compensation.
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Spain Officials Quit Over Trains That Were Too Wide For Tunnels

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  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:11PM (#63316111) Homepage
    I am reminded of how a few years ago, Spain designed submarines which were about 100 tons too heavy https://www.military.com/military-life/how-misplaced-decimal-point-nearly-took-down-spains-newest-submarines.html [military.com] which cost a bit extra to design. As a math teacher, I always like stories like this because they are great to tell students about what they need to really be careful about. But I suspect that Spain is not going to be happy being the source of now two of my go-to examples.
    • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:19PM (#63316119)

      Any word if those too heavy submarines would fit through the train tunnels?
      Just wondering if maybe some people need to switch design teams in Spain ... :-)

      • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:55PM (#63316261)

        No, but according to the article, they belatedly realize their solution of expanding the submarine's length made the boats too big for their intended home harbor. So now they're expanding the harbor.

        These sorts of military design fiascos are really nothing new. The Swedish warship Vasa (1628) was designed and built so top-heavy, on it's maiden voyage, it simply rolled over and sank about a mile into it's journey. And just perusing WW2 procurement history gives all sorts of design disasters, both for Allies and Axis countries.

        • No, but according to the article, they belatedly realize their solution of expanding the submarine's length made the boats too big for their intended home harbor. So now they're expanding the harbor.

          I take it simply adding "floaties" to the submarines to make them more buoyant wasn't considered? :-)

          More seriously, nice info, thanks.

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          These sorts of military design fiascos are really nothing new. The Swedish warship Vasa (1628) was designed and built so top-heavy, on it's maiden voyage, it simply rolled over and sank about a mile into it's journey. And just perusing WW2 procurement history gives all sorts of design disasters, both for Allies and Axis countries.

          The Vasa was built in the 17th century where we didn't really know all that much about buoyancy and the physics of stuff that floats. The top-heaviness was a result of the fact the

          • The Vasa was built in the 17th century where we didn't really know all that much about buoyancy and the physics of stuff that floats.

            The implication of your claim is that those ships which didn't immediately capsize and sink were designed by shipbuilders who just happened to get things right by accident - which I find profoundly stupid.

        • These sorts of military design fiascos are really nothing new.

          These sort of design fiascos are not new to any industry private, public or military. There's examples a plenty the world over of these kinds of f-ups. Both the kind that results from calculation error, and the kind that results from poor documentation.

          • Yup. Large corporations burn 8 and 9 figures on massive IT infrastructure projects that have to be abandoned with little or nothing usable much more often people realize.

            This here is not an actual $275M mistake. Apparently, the mistake was caught a couple years ago, and that was early enough to merely delay delivery of the new trains. That is very inconvenient, but not a disaster.

    • That's OK, I'm sure you can use the Mars probe story to balance that out, that was a doozy and not at all Spain's fault.

      • by dbialac ( 320955 )
        I think the difficulty in sending a probe millions of miles away and safely and independently landing on another planet far outweighs the difficulty in digging a tunnel a few miles long.
      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Lots of stories about mixing measurement systems. Even today if you asked me for a gallon of water, I'd give you 10 lbs of water rather then what (assuming you're American) you expected. Shit, we only agreed to use the same inch abut 70 years back.

        • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
          Or you can use the sane measurement system as the testevof the wourld, you know SI, no conversion needed when designs cime from iversea, added bonus, converting between different SI units is often just a gusestion of multiplying by the cirrect power of 10, quick example what volume of water weighs 1000Kg ( ignoring the sight variation due to expansion/contraction related to temperature/atmospheric oressure, we just want a ballbark number) ok we know thar 1 litre of water ( 1000cm^3 or 1/1000 of 1m^3) weigh
          • by nukenerd ( 172703 ) on Thursday February 23, 2023 @06:43AM (#63317323)

            Or you can use the sane measurement system as the testevof the wourld, .....

            Maybe we could standardise on spelling too.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            Changed to the metric system here about 50 years back, still think in gallons, feet, pounds, though largely metricised. 4 litre gallons, 30 cm foot kind of thing. In some ways imperial has easier units in the sense of the size. Buying a litre or 4 litres instead of 5 litres. Doesn't help change when a lot of stuff is in American sizes, 3.78 litre containers, 454 gram butter etc. Much of the country seems to be bilingual with measurements.

          • Funny. Americans (Canadians, Brits) almost never have any trouble converting measurements within their own system. It's only when you introduce conversion to other systems that things tend to go awry.

            And of course, that's the fault of the other system as much as it is America's.

            Imperial is designed to work with real human values for people who actually use the measurements day to day in their work. Metric is designed for scientists who can't be bothered to learn more than one conversion system.

            Neither is mo

            • Comment removed based on user account deletion
              • You're conflating two systems (UK/US) and calling them one though. I already indicated conversion between systems is problematic.

                And yeah, the system - if not designed top-down - was still developed by actual people who used measurements that worked well for them, their suppliers, and their customers.

                • So did Roman numbers.

                  Then the arrabic system came along.

                  • No, the Roman system didn't work well for its users. That's why the Indian system (Arabic glyphs, but Indian positioning system) took over.

                    • It hard its advantages. For instance there is a multiplication system fo .big numbers that you can do in the Roman system on your fingers. I learned this in Latin, but I forgot (many decades ago).

                      However, it had man disadvantages, too.

                      But this is the point: but they didn't know that. It was the best they knew. That's why initially there was great reluctance to accept the Arabic system when it came to Europe.

                      Same with imperial: you think it's useful because that's what you grew up with, but actually it's mor

                    • The difference is Romans were essentially mathematically illiterate. They didn't contribute anything significant to maths for their whole millennia long existence.

                      America on the other hand has contributed more to science and math in its short history than any other country in the world, with the exception of maybe India and UK.

                    • No thanks to its imperial units. This is just a fact of history, that America is now one of the leading technological countries. And im fact most of US contributions were in metric or SI units, mot imperial. (NASA, all of university physics etc.)

                      100 years ago it was Germany and other European countries that were tip of the spear (Von Neumann, Carnot, Gauss, Mach, Einstein, ...).

                    • Oh, and BTW, Romans did their fair share of contributions (aquaeducts, heating systems, advanced catapults and other asssult devices, advanced construction systems and chemistry comparable to modern concrete etc).

                    • And yet they failed to make a single contribution to math.

                    • No, not thanks to imperial units.

                      But absolutely thanks to the decision to use positional numbering.

            • Imperial is designed to work with real human values for people who actually use the measurements day to day in their work.

              Not so sure sure why you think metric isn't.

              What do you think is so diffict to "a kilo of wheat four", or "a 20 cm dildo", as opposed to "two pounds of four" and "an 8 inch dick."

              The fact that 20 cm is nothing to you, but "8 inch" is, well... that's just getting used to.

              Oh, you need more flour? Take a 50 kilo sack, where's the problem. You only need 50 grams or so for a muffin anyway.

              Why is that more difficult than "2 ounces"?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Lolaine ( 262966 )

      You can also teach how NASA lost the 1999 Mars Climate Orbiter because JPL used metric system while Lockheed Martin used imperial, and -this is the important part- nobody resigned.

    • by gflash ( 6321000 )

      I am reminded of how a few years ago, Spain designed submarines which were about 100 tons too heavy https://www.military.com/military-life/how-misplaced-decimal-point-nearly-took-down-spains-newest-submarines.html [military.com] which cost a bit extra to design. As a math teacher, I always like stories like this because they are great to tell students about what they need to really be careful about. But I suspect that Spain is not going to be happy being the source of now two of my go-to examples.

      What about the Airbus A380 example where the wires were the wrong length due to different design software used by the French and the Germans?: https://simpleflying.com/airbu... [simpleflying.com]

    • Don't worry. Spain has some good company in France. In 2014 the French train operator SNCF has discovered that 2,000 new trains it ordered at a cost of 15bn Euros were too wide for many regional platforms. It cost them millions to modify the thousands of regional train platforms so the wider trains could pull into those stations without scraping the platforms. https://www.bbc.com/news/world... [bbc.com]

    • France had a similar train size snafu a few years back as well.

      https://www.bbc.com/news/world... [bbc.com]

      In that case the trains were already build.

  • by glatiak ( 617813 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:16PM (#63316117)

    This seems to be another in the continuing series of 'politicians make terrible engineers'. And I recall another where the trains didn't work with the existing platform placement. Where we used to live they put in an electric ferry -- save that at one end of its transit (where it spends most of its time) there is no way to charge it. There needs to be a public list... shaming these idiots. Maybe someday they will stop doing engineering.

    • How about shaming the engineers responsible for the non-standard tunnels in the northern regions of Asturias and Cantabria?

      • by TWX ( 665546 )

        Sure, I bet their great, great grandchildren are around to embarrass.

      • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:40PM (#63316203)

        How about shaming the engineers responsible for the non-standard tunnels in the northern regions of Asturias and Cantabria?

        The tunnels were built between 100-200 years ago and were probably "standard" sizes *then*. From TFA:

        The rail network in northern Spain was built in the 19th Century and has tunnels under the mountainous landscape that do not match standard modern tunnel dimensions.

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        You are going to try to blame the sizing of tunnels built in the 1800s?

        Whoever thought it would be a good idea to try and standardize rail tunnel size ought to have settled on the smallest width in use.

        But at the end of the day.. The patient isn't at fault for having the non-standard blood type if the hospital administers the wrong one. It's not a mistake of the tunnel designer they ordered the a train to the wrong specifications; And it's not even wrong to design a different size than what is common

        • Whoever thought it would be a good idea to try and standardize rail tunnel size ought to have settled on the smallest width in use.

          Just keeping it to passenger lines, that might be the Glasgow Subway with 11ft diameter tubes, a bit smaller than the London Underground tube lines. The Glasgow system is isolated, but the London tube lines share track in places with standard "main line" trains; the latter, being in the UK, are themselves significantly smaller than the international UIC gauge. The London Underground's small trains are severely over-crowded at times, and LU might welcome any contribution from yourself to rebore their 250 m

        • It's almost like standards bodies (like the metric guys) don't consider how things are used in the real world, and only care about some academic aesthetic of beauty.

      • What standard? And what revision of said standard?

        That's the great thing about standards isn't it.

    • by TWX ( 665546 )

      MBA mentality.

      I have no doubt that someone below them told them that these new models were too large for the loading-gauge. And that person was ignored because if the decision-maker even had heard of the concept of loading-gauge they for some reason didn't think that it was possible that there were special cases, even though rail is a very old technology.

      Only once the true depth of their failures were evident did they at least acknowledge their failures, and merely to quit.

      • Give them a break, there were 20 criteria and the new trains scored well on 19 out of 20!
    • This seems to be another in the continuing series of 'politicians make terrible engineers'. And I recall another where the trains didn't work with the existing platform placement. Where we used to live they put in an electric ferry -- save that at one end of its transit (where it spends most of its time) there is no way to charge it. There needs to be a public list... shaming these idiots. Maybe someday they will stop doing engineering.

      I doubt the politicians are the ones making these specific decisions with the responsibility like checking tunnel dimensions all along the lines. In fact, I'm pretty certain at no point did someone do something like look at a tiny tunnel then went ahead and bought too big train.

      A better explanation might be that politicians make terrible managers, though that really depends on how the transit is run. Either way, mistakes like this are rarely the work of one person but are more likely due to wider ranging or

    • This seems to be another in the continuing series of 'politicians make terrible engineers'.

      Politicians have nothing to do with it. These kinds of design errors transcend the public / private ownership barrier. Heck when I was a graduate I briefly worked at a private company that made exactly the same mistake, except it wasn't a tunnel the new trains didn't fit into, they could fit under the coal unloading arm.

      The issue is always design assumptions and documentation. The assumption that the current standard is the design limit (rather than reflecting that outdated equipment is part of the design l

    • There was this fiasco [wikipedia.org] in the 1980s in the US in an attempt to make a standard light rail vehicle. Scroll down to the "Problems" section. I don't know about Boston, but San Francisco's second generation LRVs (Bredas) were too heavy. San Francisco's third generation LRVs are finally good.
  • by jabuzz ( 182671 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:22PM (#63316131) Homepage

    The alternative is to fix the none standard loading gauge of the tunnels.

    • The alternative is to fix the none standard loading gauge of the tunnels.

      TFA notes the tunnels were built in the 19th century, through/under the mountains. I don't know how long they are, but imagine it would be prohibitively expensive to increase the size of the tunnels, though doing so would alleviate issues like this going forward and allow the use of modern "standard size" trains throughout the network.

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Got a half billion dollars lying around for a tunnel expansion? This would incur the sort of financial loss they at least avoided in this situation -- since it's a 2 year delay instead of having the wrong train delivered

    • They did that in Australia. QR bought new commuter trains which didn't fit in the tunnels. So they modified the tunnels.

      But be careful of the use of "non standard". There is no one standard, not even internally within an organisation are things like this unchanging for long periods of time to say nothing of 200 years we're talking about here.

  • by test321 ( 8891681 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:25PM (#63316133)

    It's not the TRAINS (as a physical object) that could not fit, it's the INITIAL REQUIREMENT that was wrong. Somebody drafted trains with dimensions forgetting about the tunnels. The mechanical company, whose first task as part of the contract, was to check the compatibility of the requirements with the actual infrastructure, did what they had to do, found the problems, and notified the officials. There, an unnecessary amount of time was lost when said officials failed to answer. This apparently caused 2 years of delay in the delivery of the trains.

    I think it's great if a delay (not even a cost increase) in a public contract now causes top officials (a Secretary of State) to take political responsibility.

    There will certainly something to learn in the results of the investigation. Maybe (just speculation) the company had a contact that was a top manager (at train company) or a politician rather than an engineering responsible. There are ways emails get lost when dealing with large organizations.

    • Somebody drafted trains with dimensions forgetting about the tunnels.

      Did they forget about the tunnels or did they make incorrect assumptions about the tunnels? I.e. pull up the current tunnel standard and design to that (assumption: tunnels meet the current standard).

  • by greytree ( 7124971 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:43PM (#63316221)
    "Two top Spanish transport officials have resigned over a botched order for new commuter trains that cost nearly $275m."

    "The Spanish government says the mistake was spotted early enough to avoid financial loss."

    Great journalism, great editing, all clear to the readers.
    You must be so proud of your jobs.
    • Don't understand your confusion. The trains cost nearly $275M but the mistake was spotted early enough that it didn't effect the cost. AKA the order for the trains was made but the trains had not been built yet so when they discovered the mistake in time they changed the order and the builder said "ok you get the trains to the new spec at the same price but delivery will be delayed by 2 years".
      • "Two top Spanish transport officials have resigned over a botched order for new commuter trains that cost nearly $275m."

        So they wrote that the botched order cost $275m.

        Except it didn't.
      • by Askmum ( 1038780 )
        It is clickbait, nothing less. The reader gets wound up for trains that were built (they weren't) that have cost nearly $275M, making them think the error cost that much (it didn't) only to read in the last sentence that oh wait, no there is no problem really because it was spotted early enough to avoid any financial loss.
  • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @05:51PM (#63316247)

    is that about the long and short of it?

  • Politicians will only make these large purchases once in their political career, so they will be inexperienced. They are used to making lots of little decisions and are used to the engineers catching the mistakes. Making a big purchase is more politics than technical anyway. In Ottawa, Canada, we purchased light rail. The city engineers eliminated one of the bids because the engineers didn't think the company behind the bid nor their actual bid were technically sound. The politicians over ruled the eng
    • So, you prefer a an expensive fiasco over nice cheap status quo? What point did these politicians have?

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        The status quo can get quite expensive in an expanding city. Think of ever growing traffic jams. Don't know the particulars of this case.

  • by hoofie ( 201045 ) <(mickey) (at) (mouse.com)> on Wednesday February 22, 2023 @08:46PM (#63316617)

    The Hastings Line tunnels in the UK are undersized because the original Victorian contractor botched it and extra brick lining was needed thus reducing the bore size.

    It required narrower rolling stock both for passenger and freight right up until the 1980s when many of the tunnels were single tracked and more precise track alignment meant normal UK rolling stock could run. [UK Loading gauge is smaller than the European Continental gauge as tunnels, bridges, platforms were built so early on in the history of railways by many different companies leading to a plethora of standards].

  • A few years back a satire show on German TV was joking that the Federal Train Service was updating a smaller track to higher platforms even though the trains running the line fit perfectly. They failed to see that updating the track to standard would make operations more smoothly and allow for standard trains to be used.

    Standards do make a lot of sense if everyone gets why they exist.

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