The American Railway Engineering and Maintenance-of-Way Association (AREMA) was formed on October 1, 1997, as the result of a merger of three engineering support associations, namely the American Railway Bridge and Building Association, the American Railway Engineering Association and the Roadmaster's and Maintenance of Way Association, along with functions of the Communications and Signals Division of the Association of American Railroads.
Track
Track
- Ch. 1 - Roadway & Ballast
- Ch. 4 - Rail
- Ch. 5 - Track
- Ch. 30 - Ties
Structures
- Ch. 7 - Timber Structures
- Ch. 8 - Concrete Structures & Foundations
- Ch. 9 - Seismic Design for Railway Structures
- Ch. 15 - Steel Structures
Inrastructure and Passenger
- Commuter, Transit & High Speed Rail
- Ch. 6 - Buildings & Support Facilities
- Ch. 11 - Commuter and Intercity Rail Systems
- Ch. 12 - Rail Transit
- Ch. 14 - Yards and Terminals
- Ch. 17 - High Speed Rail Systems
- Ch. 18 - Light Density and Short Line Railways
- Ch. 27 - Maintenance-of-Way Work Equipment
- Ch. 33 - Electrical Energy Utilization
Systems Management
- Ch. 2 - Track Measuring Systems
- Ch. 13 - Environmental
- Ch. 16 - Economics of Railway Engineering and Operations
- Ch. 28 - Clearances
- AAR Scale Handbook
Code
AREMA: Manual for Railway Engineering 2012 http://www.arema.org/publications/mre/
AREMA: Manual for Railway Engineering 1999
http://depositfiles.com/files/a0t3wdlga
http://rapidshare.com/files/457787041/Arema_1999.rar
http://uploading.com/files/8m4ma359/Arema_1999.rar/
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks to Ur Support