The French company Vossloh Cogifer has specialised in the field of fixed installations for rail networks of all kinds for over 100 years. As one of the market leaders, the plant manufacturer plans, designs and produces customised switches and crossings for all loads, profiles and track gauges worldwide. The Trier site primarily manufactures tram turnouts, with a total of between 300 and 400 turnouts being produced each year.
All turnouts are manufactured in two-shift operation using modern machinery. This includes sawing and drilling machines, milling benches and a CNC-controlled portal milling machine, which has been in use since 2002. In order to protect the cables from the many hot chips in the long term, the company relies on a closed system, an energy pipe. However, due to the extreme requirements on site, the old energy supply system was usually worn out after a maximum of nine months, so the manufacturer was involved and together they looked for an alternative solution. Various approaches, such as a metal energy supply system, were considered and then rejected.
Milling the points not only produces an extremely high number of chips of all sizes, but they are also very sharp-edged. "Some of them come flying in red-hot like needles. 600 °C and more are not uncommon," says Matthias Krames, summarising the conditions on site. The chips used to leave traces of burning and melting in the plastic, and the lid of the energy supply system opened in places due to the enormous load. Chips gradually penetrated, making it critical for the inserted cables. As a result, the system repeatedly came to a standstill. In addition, the plant manufacturer was looking for a cost-effective solution that would also last in the long term.