Hi I have come across this fastening and wondered if anyone could tell me it's correct name.
Pandrol not Pandarol
Are you sure it's a Pandrol clip? It looks similar but not quite the same as any of their clips
The image is taken from PLPR
I think its one of the original 60's design that has been bent out of shape. (the design came in left and right sided options)
Similar picture of a vintage pandrol that has been incorrectly installed,
i.e. the arm should be resting on top of the metal not underneath it and its been installed back to front.
Those are 2 different styles of pandrol clips, e clips at the top and 401 at the bottom.
Pandrol clips weigh a ton (well, feels like it), in bulk bagshad to count around 1800 of them, separating L and R ones last month.
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I'm wondering if the aspect ratio of that image is wrong, when you stretch horizontally it looks a lot more like a Pandrol clip.
It still looks wrong the nylon is a funny shape and the end of the clip is not usually turned under the housing.
If you enjoyed that I have a bag crimps I was going to give to a Graduate that you might enjoy![]()
Similar picture of a vintage pandrol that has been incorrectly installed,
![]()
i.e. the arm should be resting on top of the metal not underneath it and its been installed back to front.
Apologies for digging up this old thread and taking it slightly off-topic, but recent observations have made me wonder something and it wasn't worth starting a new thread.
I live alongside a line that is currently closed for five weeks for upgrade works. Small excavators are among the equipment being used, and as they run up and down the track on tank treads (rather than their railway wheels on the track, which they also do) some of the Pandrol Clips have been displaced and are no longer clipping the rails to the sleepers.
Which lead me to wonder how many Pandrol Clips can be missing from a rail before it starts to become liable to spread under the weight of a passing train?
I'm guessing that there is an inbuilt margin of error, and that a few missing or displaced Pandrol Clips isn't going to be too much of a problem in the circumstances. I'm also assuming that the speed and weight of trains plays a major part.
As I watched a procession of six fully-laden engineering trains use the track last night, it made me wonder how many Pandrol Clips could be lost before I find an unexpected limestone rockery has appeared below the kitchen window!(Yes I am joking, but we all know these things do happen occasionally!)
What are the guidelines?
Which lead me to wonder how many Pandrol Clips can be missing from a rail before it starts to become liable to spread under the weight of a passing train?
What are the guidelines?