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Inside the Queensferry Crossing - as you've never seen it before

The Scotsman Transport Correspondent Alastair Dalton is given an exclusive behind-the-scenes tour of the Queensferry Crossing, including its maintenance monorail shuttle which runs under the carriageway the length of the bridge, and gantries which provide access under the deck.

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Transcript
00:00 [Music]
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00:42 - I'm Alistair Dalton from the Scotsman.
00:44 I'm somewhere you will never have seen before.
00:47 I'm inside the Queensferry Crossing.
00:49 I'm below the deck in a monorail
00:52 which runs the length of the bridge,
00:54 enabling much more quick inspections
00:59 of the mile and a half long structure.
01:02 It's known as the rat 'cause it runs through a tunnel.
01:06 And here we go.
01:07 (door slams)
01:11 The main advantage of the deck shuttle
01:13 is it allows us to transit small teams,
01:15 a team of two, out to any point on the deck
01:19 much quicker than it would be to walk out.
01:23 Also has the additional advantage of it,
01:25 there's an area you can take small tools,
01:28 small hand tools, so if someone were going out
01:29 to do a particular piece of maintenance work,
01:32 two man team can go out there with their tools.
01:36 So that makes it safer.
01:37 (upbeat music)
01:40 (metal clanking)
01:43 We're standing on the under deck maintenance gantries
01:47 for the Queensferry Crossing.
01:49 And we use these for accessing and maintenance
01:52 and inspection of the under deck.
01:54 Yes, the gantry of travels on a twin rail system
01:59 traveling between the North and South towers.
02:02 (upbeat music)
02:10 (metal clanking)
02:37 Since we cleaned the cables, we haven't had an event,
02:39 but it's too early to say whether that's the reason
02:44 why we haven't had an event or not.
02:45 It may just be the climate the last couple of years
02:48 has not been conducive to ice forming in such a way
02:52 that would cause damage to vehicles.
02:56 However, the evidence from the trials
02:58 and the lab conditions did show that cleaning the cables
03:01 had a beneficial effect.
03:03 The ice accreting is not the danger.
03:05 The real problem is when it falls,
03:07 when it sheds, when it falls off,
03:08 and if it falls off in large enough clumps,
03:10 then it could damage vehicles.
03:12 So that's the issue.
03:13 Well, the latest is that we've completed a review
03:18 of all the sort of mitigation methods
03:21 that are used worldwide.
03:22 And we have come to the conclusion
03:25 that the simplest thing to do on Queensferry
03:30 is to continue with the weather forecasting
03:34 and the monitoring, which we're able to do
03:37 and predict fairly accurately when an event's gonna occur.
03:40 And if an event does occur,
03:41 which is going to be hazardous enough
03:45 to cause problems for traffic,
03:47 then we would still have to close the bridge.
03:50 However, what we have done,
03:52 as we're in the process of doing,
03:54 is introducing new automated barriers
03:57 at the North and South,
03:58 which should make the process of diverting traffic
04:01 from the M90 across Queensferry Crossing
04:04 onto the A9000 Forth Road bridge.
04:08 (upbeat music)
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04:53 [MUSIC PLAYING]

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