Here鈥檚 the good news: Honolulu rail officials won鈥檛 have to replace entire track crossings along the island鈥檚 elevated transit route in order to fix the problems with ill-fitting train wheels.
Instead, they can solve that snafu by doing temporary welding work at the crossings and gradually replacing the botched steel wheels with wider ones.
That combined approach has been blessed by , the railroad expert hired earlier this year to examine the problem, in the firm鈥檚 recent report for the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation.
It鈥檚 sure to be faster and less costly than replacing the crossings, HART officials say, although the specific time frame and pricetag remain unclear.
The bad news, however, is that HART still hasn鈥檛 found a contractor who can do the necessary track welding.
That likely means further delay to provide interim rail service, an effort that鈥檚 already faced numerous setbacks. Currently, HART hopes to deliver the transit line鈥檚 first 10 miles from east of Kapolei to Aloha Stadium by mid-2022, according to agency officials.
HART鈥檚 schedule calls for the temporary welding to be done by mid-November but it鈥檚 鈥渧ery, very likely鈥 that won鈥檛 happen, HART Project Manager Nathaniel 鈥淣ate鈥 Meddings told agency board members during a Tuesday.
Meddings did not indicate when HART might secure the necessary welders, but he said that the agency is urgently reaching out to companies on the mainland and seeking the best way to get them working on Oahu quickly.
That could involve embedding mainland-based welding crews with rail contractors or seeking special work exemptions from the state, Meddings said.
A solicitation for the welding work failed to draw any bidders by the September deadline. HART officials later said that was because no companies in Hawaii were licensed to do the welding work.
Hiring someone to do the track welding has been 鈥渁 difficult task,鈥 Meddings said Tuesday. City Transportation Services Director Roger Morton, who sits on the HART board, added that eventually the rail line will need a contractor who鈥檚 licensed to do such welding work as part of regular track maintenance.
HART, Hitachi Still Haven’t Decided Who’s At Fault
The steel wheels on Honolulu鈥檚 four-car trains are currently 4.75 inches wide, according to TTCI鈥檚 Oct. 22 report, which Civil Beat obtained through a public records request.
Previously, the agency had refused to clarify the status of that report and whether TTCI had delivered it.
The firm in its report recommends that the new wheels be at least 5.28 inches wide even though HART had planned to use 5.15-inch-wide wheels. HART representatives said in an email that they plan to follow TTCI鈥檚 recommendation for the wider wheels.
The temporary track welding will accommodate both the 4.75- and 5.28-inch wheel sizes, allowing train-testing to continue in West Oahu. The welding will gradually wear off once all the wider wheels are in place, Meddings and other rail officials say. Once it鈥檚 gone, it won鈥檛 need to be replaced.
Meddings said that the first set of new, wider wheels should be ready in August 2022. It should take about a year to replace all of the existing, narrower wheels, he added.
HART has yet to provide details on how much the fix will cost. During Tuesday鈥檚 meeting, board Chairwoman Colleen Hanabusa asked Meddings, 鈥淲hose fault is it?鈥
Meddings replied that HART and Hitachi Rail Honolulu, which created the driverless trains and their wheels, are 鈥渟aving arguments on commercial liability鈥 until after the crisis passes.
He acknowledged that it鈥檚 an important question and that HART is factoring into its budget the risk that it might have to cover those costs.
贬颈迟补肠丑颈鈥檚 states that the company 鈥渟hall finalize the (wheel) profile and retain final responsibility for obtaining satisfactory wheel/rail interface performance and minimum rail/wheel wear rates.鈥
HART discovered last year that the wheel rims were too narrow for the track crossings, also called 鈥渇rogs,鈥 creating potential safety issues.
Read the TTCI report here:
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org