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AU2009210376A1 - Rail car suspension damping - Google Patents

Rail car suspension damping Download PDF

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Publication number
AU2009210376A1
AU2009210376A1 AU2009210376A AU2009210376A AU2009210376A1 AU 2009210376 A1 AU2009210376 A1 AU 2009210376A1 AU 2009210376 A AU2009210376 A AU 2009210376A AU 2009210376 A AU2009210376 A AU 2009210376A AU 2009210376 A1 AU2009210376 A1 AU 2009210376A1
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AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
damping
spring
bogie
suspension
component
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
AU2009210376A
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AU2009210376B2 (en
Inventor
Philip Edward Morris
Joseph Wolinski
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Bradken Resources Pty Ltd
Original Assignee
Bradken Resources Pty Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from AU2008904260A external-priority patent/AU2008904260A0/en
Application filed by Bradken Resources Pty Ltd filed Critical Bradken Resources Pty Ltd
Priority to AU2009210376A priority Critical patent/AU2009210376B2/en
Publication of AU2009210376A1 publication Critical patent/AU2009210376A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU2009210376B2 publication Critical patent/AU2009210376B2/en
Ceased legal-status Critical Current
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61FRAIL VEHICLE SUSPENSIONS, e.g. UNDERFRAMES, BOGIES OR ARRANGEMENTS OF WHEEL AXLES; RAIL VEHICLES FOR USE ON TRACKS OF DIFFERENT WIDTH; PREVENTING DERAILING OF RAIL VEHICLES; WHEEL GUARDS, OBSTRUCTION REMOVERS OR THE LIKE FOR RAIL VEHICLES
    • B61F5/00Constructional details of bogies; Connections between bogies and vehicle underframes; Arrangements or devices for adjusting or allowing self-adjustment of wheel axles or bogies when rounding curves
    • B61F5/02Arrangements permitting limited transverse relative movements between vehicle underframe or bolster and bogie; Connections between underframes and bogies
    • B61F5/04Bolster supports or mountings
    • B61F5/06Bolster supports or mountings incorporating metal springs
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61FRAIL VEHICLE SUSPENSIONS, e.g. UNDERFRAMES, BOGIES OR ARRANGEMENTS OF WHEEL AXLES; RAIL VEHICLES FOR USE ON TRACKS OF DIFFERENT WIDTH; PREVENTING DERAILING OF RAIL VEHICLES; WHEEL GUARDS, OBSTRUCTION REMOVERS OR THE LIKE FOR RAIL VEHICLES
    • B61F5/00Constructional details of bogies; Connections between bogies and vehicle underframes; Arrangements or devices for adjusting or allowing self-adjustment of wheel axles or bogies when rounding curves
    • B61F5/02Arrangements permitting limited transverse relative movements between vehicle underframe or bolster and bogie; Connections between underframes and bogies
    • B61F5/04Bolster supports or mountings
    • B61F5/12Bolster supports or mountings incorporating dampers
    • B61F5/122Bolster supports or mountings incorporating dampers with friction surfaces

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Vibration Prevention Devices (AREA)
  • Springs (AREA)

Description

AUSTRALIA Patents Act 1990 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION Standard Patent Applicant(s): BRADKEN RESOURCES PTY LIMITED Invention Title: RAIL CAR SUSPENSION DAMPING The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method for performing it known to me/us:
AUSTRALIA Patents Act 1990 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION Standard Patent Applicant(s): BRADKEN RESOURCES PTY LIMITED Invention Title: RAIL CAR SUSPENSION DAMPING The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method for performing it known to me/us: - 2 RAIL CAR SUSPENSION DAMPING The present invention relates to suspensions for rail cars and in particular is concerned with a resilient damping 5 system for use in bogies (or trucks) wherein a pivotal bolster extends between side frames and a resilient suspension is located between the bolster and each of the side frames. 10 There is a very great difference between the total weight of a freight rail car between its unloaded and loaded conditions. Typically the tare of a rail car is of the order of 20 tons and the car when fully loaded may be of the order of 120 tons. The design of the suspension can 15 readily focus on carrying the loads effectively in either a loaded condition or an unloaded condition or some compromise may be reached, but the challenge is to provide an effective damping to the suspension when operating empty or loaded. 20 Generally designs are either based on constant damping or variable damping. Typically each bogie comprises a transversely extending bolster (on which the rail car body is pivotally mounted) and a pair of side frames mounting 25 wheels (interconnected by axles) in suitable bearings. A spring suspension mounts the bolster on the side frames. Typically the suspension on each side frame comprises a multiplicity of parallel helical load springs together with damping springs supporting friction shoes (which are 30 usually wedge shaped) and which transmit load from the damping springs to the friction shoe to urge its surface onto a vertical friction wear plate mounted on the bolster. 35 The design of the damping springs determines the damping effect to attenuate displacement of the side frames relative to the bolster. One approach is constant damping - 3 where the static column load does not vary with deflection. Thus, with constant damping, the restoring force is 5 constant with displacement in the system and when designed to suit the unloaded weight of the vehicle this can provide good performance in that configuration but is problematical when the vehicle is loaded, despite the designer seeking to select springs of appropriate 10 performance and rating. An alternative is a variable damping suspension where the restoring force varies with displacement. Such an approach is believed to be particularly useful for loaded vehicles 15 operating at the loaded rating. However, when the vehicle is unloaded the system is problematical. Since empty rail cars often travel at greater speeds, an unsuitable damping system is a problem and instability , with consequent adverse wear on the railcars and the track, is likely. 20 Broadly the present invention is based on the concept of having separate independent but co-operating resilient systems to provide a blend of variable damping and constant damping. 25 In one aspect, the present invention relies on the appreciation of using a dual system having a first resilient system essentially in a substantially variable damping mode, and a second independent resilient system in 30 co-operating arrangement providing substantially constant damping. In practice though the range of "loaded" to "empty", the damping can vary from principally a variable damping component and a minor constant damping component to principally a constant damping component and a minor 35 variable damping component.
- 4 In another aspect, the present invention may be considered as directed to a suspension system for a rail car bogie having a transverse bolster and side frames, the suspension system comprising a first resilient structure s with a line of action for damping movement and acting between a side frame and a friction shoe which engages the line of action of the first resilient structure being the bolster along a first axis, and a second resilient structure acting independently of the first resilient 10 structure between the bolster and the friction shoe for providing damping, the second resilient structure acting on a second axis arranged at an acute angle to the first axis. 15 In one embodiment, the first axis can be arranged substantially vertically and the second axis at an angle of about 30 degrees to about 40 degrees to the horizontal. Such systems can be arranged to provide dual damping functions i.e. a combination of inherently variable 20 damping and constant damping components. Conveniently the embodiment may be implemented using a first helical compression spring for mounting along the first axis and a second helical compression spring for 25 mounting along the second axis. Embodiments of the invention can be implemented in many ways and for example may offer the advantage of avoiding weakening the bolster as there is no need to provide a 30 hole through the bolster and generally embodiments can be simpler to maintain than alternatives. For illustrative purposes an embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying 35 drawings, of which - - 5 Figure 1 is an isometric cut-away view of an embodiment of the invention partially assembled, the side frame being partially sectioned and the bolster being partially sectioned; 5 Figure 2 is a view of the embodiment of Figure 1 when assembled in a similar partially cut-away form; Figure 3 is an exploded view of the embodiment of Figures 10 1 and 2 showing principal components of the dual damping spring arrangement applied to the respective friction shoes; Figure 4 is an assembled view showing the components in 15 part with the side frame sectioned longitudinally through its central plane and the bolster being transversely sectioned in the same central plane of the side frame; Figure 5 is a plan of the embodiment of Figure 1 20 assembled; and Figure 6 is a longitudinal sectional view through the side frame along the line VI-VI of Figure 5. 25 A railcar bogie comprises a pair of side frames connected to a bolster through respective spring suspension systems, the bolster being adapted to mount a railcar through a central pivotal mounting not shown in the drawings. At each end, each side frame mounts a wheel in a bearing the 30 respective pairs of wheels being interconnected by axles. Figure 1 shows an embodiment in which the bolster 10 is disposed for interconnection with a side frame 11 through a suspension system 12. The side frame mounts a pair of vertical wear plates 13 which confront respective sliding 35 friction shoes 14 mounted in the bolster such that the resiliently applied force through a friction face 15 provides a damping function for the suspension.
- 6 In this case the suspension comprises a total of 9 spring elements with an outer line 16 comprising helical load compression springs and an inner line 17 comprising a s similar line of load compression springs. The matrix of springs includes a centre spring 18 most clearly shown in Figure 6 and in this embodiment comprising a smaller helical spring located within a larger helical spring to act in concert in resiliently supporting a load between 10 the bolster and the side frame. Figure 3 in an exploded view which shows a variable load spring 20 for each shoe 14 and comprising a larger diameter outer spring 20A and a smaller diameter inner 15 spring 20B, the springs being seated, as most conveniently shown in Figure 6 between a base 22 of the shoe 14 and an support surface 24 in the side frame. This spring 20 is a variable load spring and provides a variable damping component to the overall suspension system by virtue of 20 upward pressure under load on the shoe 14. The shoe is also resiliently supported for receiving a constant damping force by a constant load control spring 26. As best shown in Figure 6, the shoe has an angled 25 interior portion 28 providing a boss for locating the upper end of the control spring and the lower end of the control spring is located over a confronting portion 30 formed in the bolster and thus guiding the shoe that its movement is confined to movement along a path at an angle 30 of about 35 degrees to the horizontal. When load is applied to the rail car, the bolster under load depresses the main load control springs and moves relatively downward to the side frame in a conventional 35 manner. In a known variable control system, a variable control spring such as 24 engages on the base of a wedge shaped friction shoe in a manner similar to that shown in - 7 the drawings but in the present embodiment there is the addition of the obliquely arranged constant load control spring 26. 5 This configuration thus provides two spring influences on the friction shoe and force from each spring urges the shoe to engage with a corresponding load on the vertical wear plate 13 on the side frame. 10 Embodiments of the invention will use suitably selected spring characteristics for the installation intended and its load carrying capacities. Typically the tare of a freight rail car is of the order of 20 tons but the fully loaded weight may well be of the order of 120 tons. 15 Typically the spring characteristics and dimensions will be chosen such that in a tare condition principally the damping function component of force on each friction shoe is of the order of 70% to 80% of the total damping component from the constant load control spring 26 and the 20 balance, a minority of the total component, is from the variable load spring 24. By contrast in the heavily laden condition, the springs are such that the reverse is the case and the constant load control spring contributes only 20% to 30% of the component total of force applied for 25 damping and the balance is provided by the variable load spring. Generally embodiments are intended to be implemented where at tare damping steadily increases with the load on the 30 column from a tare condition to a fully laden condition. It is believed this approach avoids the somewhat unsatisfactory compromise in known systems of either constant control or variable control of damping and in a 35 practical and effective engineering arrangement permits effectively a dual damping phenomenon with variation in the damping through the load range to occur. If there is - 8 not appropriate damping of the spring suspension of a rail car in a particular condition, then the consequence can be instability of the cars as they travel in a railway system resulting in excessive wear of both the track and the s bogie structure.

Claims (17)

1. A suspension damping system for a railcar bogie wherein there is a first resilient system essentially in a 5 load carrying and substantially constant damping mode, and a second independent resilient system in co-operating arrangement providing variable damping.
2. A system as claimed in claim 1, wherein when the 10 system supports an unloaded railcar principally the damping is of a constant component and the minority component is variable damping and in a fully loaded situation the reverse is the case. 15
3. A suspension system for a railway car bogie having a first resilient structure with a line of action for damping movement and acting between a side frame and a friction shoe which engages the bolster, the line of action of the first resilient structure being along a 20 first axis and a second resilient structure acting independently of the first resilient structure between the bolster and the friction shoe for providing damping, the second resilient structure acting on a second axis arranged at an acute angle to the first axis. 25
4. A suspension system as claimed in claim 3, wherein in use the first axis is arranged substantially vertically and the second axis is arranged at an oblique angle. 30
5. A suspension system as claimed in claim 4, wherein the oblique angle is about 30 degrees to 40 degrees to the horizontal.
6. A suspension system as claimed in claim 3, wherein 35 the first resilient structure comprises a helical compression spring for mounting along the first axis and - 10 the second resilient structure comprises a second helical compression spring for mounting along the second axis.
7. A suspension system as claimed in claim 3, wherein 5 when the system supports an unloaded railcar, principally the damping is of a constant component and the minority component is variable damping and in a fully loaded situation the reverse is the case. 10
8. A railcar bogie comprising a bolster connected to wheel-mounting side frames through a resilient dampened suspension, the suspension including friction shoes displaceable mounted in the bolster for displacement to increase frictional engagement with a respective friction 15 plate mounted on the side frame, a spring system associated with each friction shoe and comprising a first spring acting between the side frame and the friction shoe and a second spring acting between the bolster and the friction shoe. 20
9. A bogie as claimed in claim 8, wherein the first spring has load carrying and damping functions and is essentially acting on the friction shoe to cause variable damping effects and the second spring has a control 25 function to control damping and provide a constant damping effect.
10. A bogie as claimed in claim 8, wherein the first and second springs are chosen and mounted to achieve 30 principally a constant damping component and a minority component of a variable damping component when the load is at the lower end of the operating load range, and when at the upper end of the operating load range the principal damping component is a variable damping component and a 35 minority component is a constant damping component.
- 11 11. A bogie as claimed in claim 10, wherein the principal component of damping in each case is about 70% of the total damping. 5
12. A bogie as claimed in claim 8, wherein the first and second springs are helical compression springs, the first spring in use having a substantially vertical axis and the second spring being angled at about 35 degrees to the horizontal. 10
13. A bogie as claimed in claim 7, wherein the bogie has a resilient suspension structure between each side frame and the bolster and in each side frame there are two longitudinally spaced friction shoes and respective spring 15 damping systems, the resilient suspension structure extending longitudinally on both sides of the spring damping systems.
14. A bogie as claimed in claim 7, wherein the bolster 20 and the friction shoes have respective bosses for locating within end portions of the respective second springs of each spring system.
15. A suspension damping system substantially as herein 25 described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
16. A bogie for a railcar having a suspension system as claimed in claim 15. 30
17. A railcar having a suspension system as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 7 or 15.
AU2009210376A 2008-08-19 2009-08-18 Rail car suspension damping Ceased AU2009210376B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU2009210376A AU2009210376B2 (en) 2008-08-19 2009-08-18 Rail car suspension damping

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU2008904260 2008-08-19
AU2008904260A AU2008904260A0 (en) 2008-08-19 Rail car suspension damping
AU2009210376A AU2009210376B2 (en) 2008-08-19 2009-08-18 Rail car suspension damping

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU2009210376A1 true AU2009210376A1 (en) 2010-03-11
AU2009210376B2 AU2009210376B2 (en) 2011-11-17

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AU2009210376A Ceased AU2009210376B2 (en) 2008-08-19 2009-08-18 Rail car suspension damping

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN101797926A (en) * 2010-04-22 2010-08-11 齐齐哈尔轨道交通装备有限责任公司 Bogie
CN103523037A (en) * 2013-11-11 2014-01-22 唐山轨道客车有限责任公司 Track vehicle steering frame
CN105059307A (en) * 2015-08-31 2015-11-18 南车长江车辆有限公司 Height self-adjusting device of railway wagon
CN113895472A (en) * 2021-11-16 2022-01-07 无锡巨力重工股份有限公司 Three-piece bogie for welded metallurgical vehicle

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2422638A (en) * 1944-09-18 1947-06-17 James R Cardwell Stabilizing mechanism for railway trucks and the like

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN101797926A (en) * 2010-04-22 2010-08-11 齐齐哈尔轨道交通装备有限责任公司 Bogie
CN101797926B (en) * 2010-04-22 2011-08-24 齐齐哈尔轨道交通装备有限责任公司 Bogie
CN103523037A (en) * 2013-11-11 2014-01-22 唐山轨道客车有限责任公司 Track vehicle steering frame
CN103523037B (en) * 2013-11-11 2016-09-07 唐山轨道客车有限责任公司 Rail vehicle truck
CN105059307A (en) * 2015-08-31 2015-11-18 南车长江车辆有限公司 Height self-adjusting device of railway wagon
CN105059307B (en) * 2015-08-31 2017-06-13 中车长江车辆有限公司 Railway freight-car is from height-regulating device
CN113895472A (en) * 2021-11-16 2022-01-07 无锡巨力重工股份有限公司 Three-piece bogie for welded metallurgical vehicle

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FGA Letters patent sealed or granted (standard patent)
MK14 Patent ceased section 143(a) (annual fees not paid) or expired