http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nR6K90cR8LgI found this interesting video on thermite welding. I had an educational inspection job performing visual and UT of rail welds. It lasted about 6 months and i ended up walking about 100 miles over that time frame going from weld to weld. If you have never been around this type of welding it's unlike any other. It is more of a cast weld. Making these welds they will line up two rails, leaving a gap between them. next they build a mold around the gap. The job i worked they were using something like a sand mold. In this video they are using something different, it think. You can see a hopper above the weld. this is where the weld metal is put. It is in a powder form. It also has magnesium in it. this brings the powdered metal above it's melting point. It is a violent burning so this properly mixes the weld metal. The hopper that was used on my project had an igniter on it like a blank round. This was loaded and when ready it was struck with a hammer. This started the magnesium burning. Above the joint at the bottom of the hopper there was a special wax like plug that would melt at the desired temp. Allowing the contents of the hopper to pour into the sand mold. It was a very educational job and the UT took a lot of extra procedural work, but was only able to inspect the top flange and web, no btm flange. One draw back was that you are allowed no moisture in the joint prior to welding. My job had a much bigger hopper, about 5-6 hundred pounds. One connection had some moisture that was not removed. The water violently changes from liquid to gas, expanding 300 times it's volume. This was enough to send the hopper about 30 feet straight up. Another interesting piece of equipment they use is a grinder that is on a cart that rides along the rail. It can be adjusted up and down, at any angle forward and back, and any angle left and right. All running off of gears the operator can manipulate. You can see one of these in the video at about 3:03 going by in the back ground.