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mahatmakanejeeves

(57,393 posts)
Thu Nov 7, 2019, 11:28 AM Nov 2019

On this day, November 7, 1940: the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapses.

I was going to say "tears itself to pieces," but that's a bit dramatic.

Today's thread is largely based on the one here from 2017. Wikipedia has updated the article.

Tough luck 77 years ago today, the original Tacoma Narrows Bridge:

Tacoma Narrows Bridge (1940)

Tacoma Narrows Bridge



The original Tacoma Narrows Bridge roadway twisted and vibrated violently under 40-mile-per-hour (64 km/h) winds on the day of the collapse.

Coordinates: 47°16?N 122°33?W
Other name(s): Galloping Gertie

Characteristics
Design: Suspension
Total length: 5,939 feet (1,810.2 m)
Longest span: 2,800 feet (853.4 m)
Clearance below: 195 feet (59.4 m)

History
Opened: July 1, 1940
Collapsed: November 7, 1940

The 1940 Tacoma Narrows Bridge, the first Tacoma Narrows Bridge, was a suspension bridge in the U.S. state of Washington that spanned the Tacoma Narrows strait of Puget Sound between Tacoma and the Kitsap Peninsula. It opened to traffic on July 1, 1940, and dramatically collapsed into Puget Sound on November 7 of the same year. At the time of its construction (and its destruction), the bridge was the third-longest suspension bridge in the world in terms of main span length, behind the Golden Gate Bridge and the George Washington Bridge.
....

The bridge's collapse had a lasting effect on science and engineering. In many physics textbooks, the event is wrongly presented as an example of elementary forced resonance, with the wind providing an external periodic frequency that matched the bridge's natural structural frequency. In reality, the actual cause of failure was aeroelastic flutter. The collapse boosted research into bridge aerodynamics-aeroelastics, which has influenced the designs of all later long-span bridges.
....



Program for the opening of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, June 30, 1940
....

Attempt to control structural vibration
....

The Washington Toll Bridge Authority hired Professor Frederick Burt Farquharson, an engineering professor at the University of Washington, to make wind-tunnel tests and recommend solutions in order to reduce the oscillations of the bridge. Professor Farquharson and his students built a 1:200-scale model of the bridge and a 1:20-scale model of a section of the deck. The first studies concluded on November 2, 1940—five days before the bridge collapse on November 7. He proposed two solutions:

• To drill holes in the lateral girders and along the deck so that the air flow could circulate through them (in this way reducing lift forces).
• To give a more aerodynamic shape to the transverse section of the deck by adding fairings or deflector vanes along the deck, attached to the girder fascia.

The first option was not favored because of its irreversible nature. The second option was the chosen one, but it was not carried out, because the bridge collapsed five days after the studies were concluded.

Collapse

The wind-induced collapse occurred on November 7, 1940, at 11:00 a.m. (Pacific Time), because of a physical phenomenon known as aeroelastic flutter.

Leonard Coatsworth, a Tacoma News Tribune editor, was the last person to drive on the bridge:

Around me I could hear concrete cracking. I started back to the car to get the dog, but was thrown before I could reach it. The car itself began to slide from side to side on the roadway. I decided the bridge was breaking up and my only hope was to get back to shore."

"On hands and knees most of the time, I crawled 500 yards or more to the towers… My breath was coming in gasps; my knees were raw and bleeding, my hands bruised and swollen from gripping the concrete curb… Toward the last, I risked rising to my feet and running a few yards at a time… Safely back at the toll plaza, I saw the bridge in its final collapse and saw my car plunge into the Narrows.

Tubby, Coatsworth's cocker spaniel, was the only fatality of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge disaster; he was lost along with Coatsworth's car. Professor Farquharson and a news photographer attempted to rescue Tubby during a lull, but the dog was too terrified to leave the car and bit one of the rescuers. Tubby died when the bridge fell, and neither his body nor the car was ever recovered. Coatsworth had been driving Tubby back to his daughter, who owned the dog. Coatsworth received US$450.00 (US$7,700 with inflation) for his car and US$364.40 (US$6,200 with inflation) in reimbursement for the contents of his car, including Tubby.

The newsreel video to which I linked two years ago, Youtube|watch?v=nFzu6CNtqec, has been moved. Try this; it's probably the same footage:



Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collapse (1940)
432,079 views•Nov 11, 2012

All Classic Video
46.5K subscribers

Footage of the original Tacoma Narrows bridge wobbling and eventually, collapsing from the Stillman Fires Collection.

The 1940 Tacoma Narrows Bridge was the first incarnation of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, a suspension bridge in the U.S. state of Washington that spanned the Tacoma Narrows strait of Puget Sound between Tacoma and the Kitsap Peninsula. It opened to traffic on July 1, 1940, and dramatically collapsed into Puget Sound on November 7 of the same year. At the time of its construction (and its destruction), the bridge was the third longest suspension bridge in the world in terms of main span length, behind the Golden Gate Bridge and the George Washington Bridge.


From British Pathé:



#BritishPathé #History #Bridge
Tacoma Bridge Collapse: The Wobbliest Bridge in the World? (1940) | British Pathé
1,505,556 views•Jun 18, 2013

British Pathé
1.13M subscribers

Was Tacoma Narrows Bridge the wobbliest bridge in the world? Check out this amazing footage of the collapse of the world's third largest suspension bridge (at the time), Tacoma Narrows Bridge, Washington, in 1940. The only casualty was a dog who had been left in a stalled car by its owner.

For Archive Licensing Enquiries Visit: https://goo.gl/W4hZBv
Explore Our Online Channel For FULL Documentaries, Fascinating Interviews & Classic Movies: https://goo.gl/7dVe8r

#BritishPathé #History #Bridge #Disaster

Subscribe to the British Pathé YT Channel: https://goo.gl/hV1nkf

Watch here the clip "Bomber Crashes into Empire State Building" from 1945: https://goo.gl/ABdo5e

A short documentary:



Galloping Gertie - The Collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge
79,349 views•Jul 19, 2012

Washington History
103 subscribers

Galloping Gertie -- The Collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge examines the creation and demise of the original Tacoma Narrows Bridge. Produced by Koyo Kim and Raluca Ifrim for National History Day 2007.

From WSHS' collections. Catalog ID: 2011.41.1.2

Find more videos like this in our collections: http://www.washingtonhistory.org/research/collections/

APS News

November 2016 (Volume 25, Number 10)

This Month in Physics History

November 7, 1940: Collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge

Washington State Department of Transportation, Tacoma Narrows Bridge: Lessons from the Failure of a Great Machine
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On this day, November 7, 1940: the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapses. (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Nov 2019 OP
And lives on forever in physics textbooks dalton99a Nov 2019 #1
To quote Tony Shalhoub as Fred Kwan pecosbob Nov 2019 #2
Part of my family's lore! cilla4progress Nov 2019 #3
doctors bury their mistakes ... Hermit-The-Prog Nov 2019 #4

cilla4progress

(24,726 posts)
3. Part of my family's lore!
Thu Nov 7, 2019, 11:58 AM
Nov 2019

My husband grew up right there on the Tacoma side, just n. and within sight of the bridge! About 15 years later.


Thanks - I shared this with him!

Hermit-The-Prog

(33,328 posts)
4. doctors bury their mistakes ...
Thu Nov 7, 2019, 02:17 PM
Nov 2019

Frank Lloyd Wright is reported to have said, "A doctor can bury his mistakes, but an architect can only advise his clients to plant vines."

Civil engineers, on the other hand, get their mistakes on tv news and in revisions to textbooks.

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