US3166200A - Draft gear rigging - Google Patents

Draft gear rigging Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3166200A
US3166200A US231772A US23177262A US3166200A US 3166200 A US3166200 A US 3166200A US 231772 A US231772 A US 231772A US 23177262 A US23177262 A US 23177262A US 3166200 A US3166200 A US 3166200A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
car
cushioning
coupler
yoke
draft
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US231772A
Inventor
Vernon S Danielson
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.)
Standard Car Truck Co
Original Assignee
Standard Car Truck Co
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
Application filed by Standard Car Truck Co filed Critical Standard Car Truck Co
Priority to US231772A priority Critical patent/US3166200A/en
Priority claimed from GB2513364A external-priority patent/GB1071791A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3166200A publication Critical patent/US3166200A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61GCOUPLINGS; DRAUGHT AND BUFFING APPLIANCES
    • B61G9/00Draw-gear
    • B61G9/20Details; Accessories
    • B61G9/22Supporting framework, e.g. cradles; Spring housings
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61GCOUPLINGS; DRAUGHT AND BUFFING APPLIANCES
    • B61G9/00Draw-gear
    • B61G9/04Draw-gear combined with buffing appliances

Definitions

  • Another object is to provide in addition to the usual cushioning means at each end of a car, additional cushioning means therebetween and to arrange all such cushioning means so that they carry buif load in series, such load being distributed among all of said elements.
  • Another object is to provide a spe-cial type of sliding draft gear yoke which will without the necessity of special coupler Shanks permit substantially increased travel of the coupler and draft gear under buing forces.
  • Another object is to provide a draft gear wherein a minimum amount of travel under draft :conditions and maximum amount of travel under buff conditions occurs.
  • Another object is to Vprovide in connection with an elongated sliding yoke, a keyed follower interposed between the cushioning means and the coupler to make possible the use of a standard coupler shank while permitting increased longitudinal movement of the draft gear parts under buff.
  • FIGURE 1 is a side elevation of a railroad car illustrating the invention
  • FIGURE 2 is a horizontal section along the line 2 2 of FIGURE 1 on anenlarged scale
  • FIGURE 3 is a section along the line 3-3 of FIG- URE 2; i
  • FIGURE 4 is a section along the line 4-4 of FIG- URE 3 looking in the direction of the arrows;
  • FIGURE 5 is a section similar to FIGURE 3 showing the parts in buff; p
  • FIGURE 6 is a vertical longitudinal section along the line 6 6 of FIGURE l on an enlarged scale; ⁇
  • FIGURE 7 is a section along the line 7--7 of FIG- URE 6 looking in the direction of the arrows.
  • a railroad car 1 has extending longitudinally thereof a center sill 2, preferably U-shaped in cross section and open at the bottom except for carrier cross members generally identified at 3. Adjacent each end of the car the center sill encloses a draft gear rigging indicated in FIG- URE 1 at A and shown in detail on a larger scale in FIG- URES 2, 3, 4 and 5 and supported on .the cross members 3. t
  • the draft gear rigging includes a sliding yoke 4 closed at its inboard end by the butt S. Seated on the yoke butt contained within the sliding yoke is a cushioning element 6 which is free to contract under pressure and upon release of such pressure to expand to its original dimension. A keyed follower 7 abuts the cushioning element 6 at one end, at the other end abuts the end of the conventional coupler shank 8, all these elements being contained within the sliding yoke 4.
  • the follower key 9 extends through the keyed follower, through the sliding yoke and through slots 10 in the center sill and engages the front draft stop 11 on the car.
  • the coupler shank 8 is slotted at 12 to receive the coupler key 13, which engages the lug 14 in the sliding yoke and closes the leading end of 3,166,2@6 Patented Jan. 19, 1965 the sliding yoke slot.
  • a removable cover plate 15 makes it possible to remove and insert the key 13.
  • the sliding yoke 4 is slotted at 16 in register with the center sill slots 10 which are much shorter than the sliding yoke slots 16 so as to permit the key 9 to move inwardly in the sliding yoke as the cushion 6 is compressed.
  • the cushion 17 just as the cushion 6 is free to contract under pressure and self-restoring in the absence of pressure.
  • compression means taking the form of push rods 18 which may be tubular or solid and of any desired shape. For convenience they are illustrated as tubular and capped at their ends.
  • the push rods 13 are supported along their length by a plurality of conventional guide members mounted on the U-frames, the details of which form no part of the present invention and are not here illustrated.
  • FIGURE 4 the details of the sliding yoke are illustrated.
  • the center sill and the yoke are shown as fabricated though they might be cast.
  • Guide plates 22 maintain the keyed follower 7 and the coupler shank S in vertical alignment-and permit longitudinal movement within the sliding yoke.
  • FIGURE 6 is shown the guides 23 extending inwardly from the center sill to maintain the cushion 17 in horizontal alignment, the carrier members 3 maintain the cushion 17 in vertical alignment Whilevpermitting it to move longitudinally.
  • FIGURE 5 is shown the maximum excursion possible inwardly tothe sliding yoke where the yoke butt 5 has come in contact with the buing stop 24.
  • the use 'and operation of the invention are as follows:
  • Each sliding yoke is, in draft, entirely independent of the other and its associated parts.
  • tension on the coupler shank causes the coupler key to engage the lug at the front end of the sliding yoke slot and tends to move the yoke outwardlyaway from the push rod, the follower key contacting Vthe front draft stops. Further movement of the sliding yoke compresses the cushion member in the usual manner.
  • the push rod which extends longitudinally of the car remains at rest and draft is cushioned by the one cushion member.
  • a draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate iioating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in buff, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
  • the cushioning elements at the end of the car being free to move away from the compression means.
  • a draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate floating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in buff, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
  • a draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler andan associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate floating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in bulf, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
  • the intermediate cushioning element being mounted for longitudinal movement in either direction responsive only to the compression means.
  • a draft gear rigging for a railway car including a sliding yoke, a cushioning element therein, a railway car coupler shank keyed thereto, the key being entirely enclosed within the yoke, a keyed follower between the coupler shank and the cushioning element, a key therethrough extending outwardly from the sliding yoke and a draft stop in the path of the key.
  • a draft gear rigging for a railway car including a sliding yoke, a cushioning element therein, a railway car coupler shank keyed thereto, the key being entirely enclosed within the yoke, a keyed follower between the coupler shank and the cushioning element, a key therethrough extending outwardly from the sliding yoke and a draft stop in the path of the key,
  • the keyed follower being free -to move longitudinally of the yoke as the cushioning element contracts under pressure and expands when pressure is reduced.
  • a draft gear rigging for a railway car including a sliding yoke, a cushioning element therein, a railway car coupler shank keyed thereto, the key being entirely enclosed vwithin the yoke, a keyed follower between the coupler shank and the cushioning element, a key therethrough extending outwardly from the sliding yoke and a draft stop in the path of the key,
  • the yoke being ported to permit access to the coupler shank key.
  • a draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate oating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in buff, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
  • a draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate floating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in bufr, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
  • a draft gear :rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate floating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in buff, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
  • a fixed center sill extending from end to end thereof, a' draft gear rigging at each end of the car including a draft gear yoke slidably mounted in the sill, a cushion element enclosed within the yoke, a coupler shank slidably associated withthe yoke and means for limiting their relative longitudinal excursion, means interposed between the yoke and the center sill for limiting their relative excursion, an intermediate cushioning element supported in and free to move longitudinally with respect to the sill, compression means interposed between each yoke and the adjacent end of the intermediate cushioning element, each yoke being free in draft to move away from its associated compression means, the cushioning elements within the yoke and the intermediate cushioning element being compressed in unison in butf.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Vibration Dampers (AREA)

Description

Jan. 19, 1965 v. s. DANIELsoN DRAFT GEAR RIGGING 2 Sheets-Sheet l Filed Oct. 19, 1962 v. s. DANIELsoN 3,166,200
DRAFT GEAR RIGGING 6 2 sheets-sheet 2 Jan, 19, 1965 Filed Oct. 19, 1962 United States Patent 3,166,200 DRAFT GEAR RIG-SING Vernon S. Danielson, Chicago, Ill., assignor to Standard Car Truck Co., Chicago, Ill., a corporation of Illinois Filed Oct. 19, 1962, Ser. No. 231,772 10 Claims. (Cl. 213-8) T his'invention relates to railroad car draft rigging and has for one object to provide a rigging which will substantially increase the cushioning effect and the length of travel through which the cushioning effect works in buff.
Another object is to provide in addition to the usual cushioning means at each end of a car, additional cushioning means therebetween and to arrange all such cushioning means so that they carry buif load in series, such load being distributed among all of said elements.
Another object is to provide a spe-cial type of sliding draft gear yoke which will without the necessity of special coupler Shanks permit substantially increased travel of the coupler and draft gear under buing forces.
Another object is to provide a draft gear wherein a minimum amount of travel under draft :conditions and maximum amount of travel under buff conditions occurs.
Another object is to Vprovide in connection with an elongated sliding yoke, a keyed follower interposed between the cushioning means and the coupler to make possible the use of a standard coupler shank while permitting increased longitudinal movement of the draft gear parts under buff.
Gther objects will appear from time to time throughout the specication and claims.
The invention is illustrated more or less diagrammatically in the accompanying drawings, wherein FIGURE 1 is a side elevation of a railroad car illustrating the invention; l
FIGURE 2 is a horizontal section along the line 2 2 of FIGURE 1 on anenlarged scale;
FIGURE 3 is a section along the line 3-3 of FIG- URE 2; i
FIGURE 4 is a section along the line 4-4 of FIG- URE 3 looking in the direction of the arrows;
FIGURE 5 is a section similar to FIGURE 3 showing the parts in buff; p
FIGURE 6 is a vertical longitudinal section along the line 6 6 of FIGURE l on an enlarged scale;`
FIGURE 7 is a section along the line 7--7 of FIG- URE 6 looking in the direction of the arrows.
Like parts are indicated by like characters throughout the specification and drawings.
A railroad car 1 has extending longitudinally thereof a center sill 2, preferably U-shaped in cross section and open at the bottom except for carrier cross members generally identified at 3. Adjacent each end of the car the center sill encloses a draft gear rigging indicated in FIG- URE 1 at A and shown in detail on a larger scale in FIG- URES 2, 3, 4 and 5 and supported on .the cross members 3. t
The draft gear rigging includes a sliding yoke 4 closed at its inboard end by the butt S. Seated on the yoke butt contained within the sliding yoke is a cushioning element 6 which is free to contract under pressure and upon release of such pressure to expand to its original dimension. A keyed follower 7 abuts the cushioning element 6 at one end, at the other end abuts the end of the conventional coupler shank 8, all these elements being contained within the sliding yoke 4. The follower key 9 extends through the keyed follower, through the sliding yoke and through slots 10 in the center sill and engages the front draft stop 11 on the car. The coupler shank 8 is slotted at 12 to receive the coupler key 13, which engages the lug 14 in the sliding yoke and closes the leading end of 3,166,2@6 Patented Jan. 19, 1965 the sliding yoke slot. A removable cover plate 15 makes it possible to remove and insert the key 13. The sliding yoke 4 is slotted at 16 in register with the center sill slots 10 which are much shorter than the sliding yoke slots 16 so as to permit the key 9 to move inwardly in the sliding yoke as the cushion 6 is compressed.
An arrangement such as above described is found at each end of the car, the assemblies merely being reversed.
Intermediate the length of the car at B in FIGURE 1 is an intermediate cushion element 17, FIGURES 6 and 7, contained within the center sill and supported on carrier members 3 and free to slide longitudinally. The cushion 17 just as the cushion 6 is free to contract under pressure and self-restoring in the absence of pressure. Interposed between each of the coupler-associated cushion elements at each end of the car and the intermediate cushioning element are compression means taking the form of push rods 18 which may be tubular or solid and of any desired shape. For convenience they are illustrated as tubular and capped at their ends. They are slidable in the guides 19 supported on the center sill and abut at one end on the yoke butt 5 and at the other end on an abutment plate 2t) associated with one or the other end of the cushion 17, the abutment plates carrying push rod sleeves 21 to receive the push rods 18. The push rods 13 are supported along their length by a plurality of conventional guide members mounted on the U-frames, the details of which form no part of the present invention and are not here illustrated.
I have shown but a single intermediate cushion. There might be more and I have shown compression means taking the form of push rods between each pair of aligned cushioning elements in series.
Referring to FIGURE 4, the details of the sliding yoke are illustrated. The center sill and the yoke are shown as fabricated though they might be cast. Guide plates 22 maintain the keyed follower 7 and the coupler shank S in vertical alignment-and permit longitudinal movement within the sliding yoke.
In FIGURE 6 is shown the guides 23 extending inwardly from the center sill to maintain the cushion 17 in horizontal alignment, the carrier members 3 maintain the cushion 17 in vertical alignment Whilevpermitting it to move longitudinally.
In FIGURE 5 is shown the maximum excursion possible inwardly tothe sliding yoke where the yoke butt 5 has come in contact with the buing stop 24. The use 'and operation of the invention are as follows:
Each sliding yoke is, in draft, entirely independent of the other and its associated parts. Whendraft is applied, tension on the coupler shank causes the coupler key to engage the lug at the front end of the sliding yoke slot and tends to move the yoke outwardlyaway from the push rod, the follower key contacting Vthe front draft stops. Further movement of the sliding yoke compresses the cushion member in the usual manner. The push rod which extends longitudinally of the car remains at rest and draft is cushioned by the one cushion member.
In buff, the situation is quite different. Whenbuif is applied to the coupler, the coupler key on the struck end of the car is by-passed, the butt end of the shank applies pressure to the keyed follower, the follower key is bypassed and the follower applies pressure to the cushioning means and the sliding yoke moves to the right in FIG- URE 2 and can go as far as shown in FIGURE 5 until the sliding yoke butt strikes the butt stop 24. As the sliding yoke butt moves to the right in FIGURES 2 or 5, it applies pressure to the push rod, moving it longitudinally. This applies pressure to the intermediate cushion means, compresses it and at the same time urges it toward the right in FIGURE 7. This applies pressure to the other push rod and it in turn applies pressure to the yoke butt at the opposite end of the car, moving it if we think of it in terms of FGURE 2 to the left and causing the cushioning means to compress against the keyed follower butt and force the follower key against the draft stops so that all three of the cushioning means act in series and in unison to cushion the shock.
l claim:
1. A draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate iioating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in buff, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
the cushioning elements at the end of the car being free to move away from the compression means.
2. A draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate floating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in buff, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
draft and bufling lugs at the ends `of the car to positively limit the movement of the couplersl and associated cushioning elements, the intermediate cushioning element being free to move longitudinally responsive only to the compression means.
3. A draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler andan associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate floating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in bulf, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
the intermediate cushioning element being mounted for longitudinal movement in either direction responsive only to the compression means.
4. A draft gear rigging for a railway car including a sliding yoke, a cushioning element therein, a railway car coupler shank keyed thereto, the key being entirely enclosed within the yoke, a keyed follower between the coupler shank and the cushioning element, a key therethrough extending outwardly from the sliding yoke and a draft stop in the path of the key.
5. A draft gear rigging for a railway car including a sliding yoke, a cushioning element therein, a railway car coupler shank keyed thereto, the key being entirely enclosed within the yoke, a keyed follower between the coupler shank and the cushioning element, a key therethrough extending outwardly from the sliding yoke and a draft stop in the path of the key,
the keyed follower being free -to move longitudinally of the yoke as the cushioning element contracts under pressure and expands when pressure is reduced.
6. A draft gear rigging for a railway car including a sliding yoke, a cushioning element therein, a railway car coupler shank keyed thereto, the key being entirely enclosed vwithin the yoke, a keyed follower between the coupler shank and the cushioning element, a key therethrough extending outwardly from the sliding yoke and a draft stop in the path of the key,
the yoke being ported to permit access to the coupler shank key.
7. A draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate oating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in buff, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
' the coupler and associated cushioning elements being free to move outwardly independent of the cornpression means.
8. A draft gear rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate floating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in bufr, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
all the cushioning elements being compressed in unison in series under buffing pressure by the compression means.
9. A draft gear :rigging for a railway car including a coupler and an associated cushioning element at each end of the car, an intermediate floating cushioning element between the coupler-associated elements free to move longitudinally of the car adapted to cooperate with one another in buff, the intermediate cushioning element being inoperative in draft and compression means interposed in series between all said cushioning elements,
the coupler and associated cushioning elements being free to move outwardly independent of the compression means,
all the cushioning element-s being compressed in unison in series under bufng pressure by Vthe compression means.
10. In a railroad car, a fixed center sill extending from end to end thereof, a' draft gear rigging at each end of the car including a draft gear yoke slidably mounted in the sill, a cushion element enclosed within the yoke, a coupler shank slidably associated withthe yoke and means for limiting their relative longitudinal excursion, means interposed between the yoke and the center sill for limiting their relative excursion, an intermediate cushioning element supported in and free to move longitudinally with respect to the sill, compression means interposed between each yoke and the adjacent end of the intermediate cushioning element, each yoke being free in draft to move away from its associated compression means, the cushioning elements within the yoke and the intermediate cushioning element being compressed in unison in butf.
References Cited in the le of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Guins Dec. 20, 1960

Claims (1)

1. A DRAFT GEAR RIGGING FOR A RAILWAY CAR INCLUDING A COUPLER AND AN ASSOCIATED CUSHIONING ELEMENT AT EACH END OF THE CAR, AN INTERMEDIATE FLOATING CUSHIONING ELEMENT BETWEEN THE COUPLER-ASSOCIATED ELEMENTS FREE TO MOVE LONGITUDINALLY OF THE CAR ADAPTED TO COOPERATE WITH ONE ANOTHER IN BUFF, THE INTERMEDIATE CUSHIONING ELEMENT BEING INOPERATIVE IN DRAFT AND COMPRESSION MEANS INTERPOSED IN SERIES BETWEEN ALL SAID CUSHIONING ELEMENTS, THE CUSHIONING ELEMENTS AT THE END OF THE CAR BEING FREE TO MOVE AWAY FROM THE COMPRESSION MEANS.
US231772A 1962-10-19 1962-10-19 Draft gear rigging Expired - Lifetime US3166200A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US231772A US3166200A (en) 1962-10-19 1962-10-19 Draft gear rigging

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US231772A US3166200A (en) 1962-10-19 1962-10-19 Draft gear rigging
GB2513364A GB1071791A (en) 1964-06-17 1964-06-17 Railroad car draft gear rigging

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3166200A true US3166200A (en) 1965-01-19

Family

ID=26257523

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US231772A Expired - Lifetime US3166200A (en) 1962-10-19 1962-10-19 Draft gear rigging

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3166200A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3246770A (en) * 1964-08-04 1966-04-19 Standard Car Truck Co End housing assembly for railroad car draft gears
US3313246A (en) * 1965-05-03 1967-04-11 Acf Ind Inc Railway car
US4562929A (en) * 1983-04-01 1986-01-07 Keystone Industries, Inc. Backstop assembly for use with cushioning device in sill of railway car

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2055275A (en) * 1931-04-01 1936-09-22 Symington Co Draft rigging
US2220101A (en) * 1938-03-19 1940-11-05 Cardwell Westinghouse Co Cushion underframe
US2681157A (en) * 1950-11-30 1954-06-15 Nat Malleable & Steel Castings Coupler shank and yoke connection
US2752048A (en) * 1954-02-12 1956-06-26 Waugh Equipment Co Cushion underframes
US2965246A (en) * 1958-04-04 1960-12-20 Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Draft gear rigging

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2055275A (en) * 1931-04-01 1936-09-22 Symington Co Draft rigging
US2220101A (en) * 1938-03-19 1940-11-05 Cardwell Westinghouse Co Cushion underframe
US2681157A (en) * 1950-11-30 1954-06-15 Nat Malleable & Steel Castings Coupler shank and yoke connection
US2752048A (en) * 1954-02-12 1956-06-26 Waugh Equipment Co Cushion underframes
US2965246A (en) * 1958-04-04 1960-12-20 Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Draft gear rigging

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3246770A (en) * 1964-08-04 1966-04-19 Standard Car Truck Co End housing assembly for railroad car draft gears
US3313246A (en) * 1965-05-03 1967-04-11 Acf Ind Inc Railway car
US4562929A (en) * 1983-04-01 1986-01-07 Keystone Industries, Inc. Backstop assembly for use with cushioning device in sill of railway car

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2559743A (en) Shock absorbing mechanisms for railway draft riggings
US3166200A (en) Draft gear rigging
US2766894A (en) Selective travel draft gear with separate cushioning elements for buff and draft
US2889056A (en) Rubber cushioning unit
US2650720A (en) Shock absorbing mechanism for railway draft riggings
USRE25110E (en) tucker
US2217870A (en) Shock absorbing mechanism
US2974810A (en) Shock absorbing device
US1842915A (en) Car construction
US773155A (en) Friction draft-gear.
US1871420A (en) Shock absorbing mechanism
US2303915A (en) Shock absorbing mechanism
US776390A (en) Draft and buffing rigging.
US1987561A (en) Draft rigging
US2497048A (en) Draft appliance for railway cars
US1874058A (en) Railway draft rigging
US1922732A (en) Railway draft rigging
US3042224A (en) Draft assembly
US1069933A (en) Buffing mechanism for railway-cars.
US2349565A (en) Car construction
US1955858A (en) Railway draft rigging
US1301961A (en) Railway draft-rigging.
US1859703A (en) Friction draft gear
US1763974A (en) Railway draft rigging
US1758966A (en) Friction shock-absorbing mechanism