Electricity: transmission to vehicles – Collectors – Trolley retrievers
Patent
1983-06-20
1986-03-25
Reeves, Robert B.
Electricity: transmission to vehicles
Collectors
Trolley retrievers
191 591, B60L 520, B60L 532, B60L 514
Patent
active
045785465
DESCRIPTION:
BRIEF SUMMARY
This invention relates to electric traction current-collectors and is an improvement on the invention of United Kingdom Pat. No. 1 374 972 (Morganite Carbon Limited).
In the earlier invention of that Patent, a carbon current-collector block, for contacting a railway overhead power conductor, houses a rupturable tubular container for fluid with means for connection to pressure-fluid operated carrier mechanism for the block, so that, on rupture of the container, the collector block is retraced from the conductor. According to the present invention, the container is so distensible and is charged with fluid under such pressure that the container will burst if it is not completely supported by its surrounding housing.
The container may be housed completely within the carbon block or in a channel between the carbon block and a shoe or other holder.
In use of both the earlier invention and the present invention, rupture or bursting of the fluid container causes such loss of pressure that the carrier mechanism, generally known as a "pantograph", is operated to retract the current-collector block from contact with the overhead conductor and thus avoid damage to the conductor by a defective collector.
The invention is not limited to a current-collector block and carrier for an overhead conductor and may be applied to a carbon current-collector on a carrier loaded down by fluid pressure on to a conductor rail.
In the earlier invention, rupture of the fluid container is consequent only on breakage or excessive wear of the carbon block directly causing the rupture or exposing the container so that it becomes ruptured by encountering the conductor.
In the present invention, the distensible container under pressure is susceptible to any defect in complete support by the surrounding carbon block so that a fault in construction or assembly or an incipient failure, such as propagation of an opening or crack in the carbon short of actual breakage, will cause bursting of the container and consequent retraction of the pantograph.
In order to limit the vulnerability of the container to conditions affecting directly the operation of the current-collector block as such, the means for connection of the container to the pantograph, or other carrier mechanism, comprise a substantially inextensible tubular connector joined to the container within its supporting housing so that no distensible part of the container extends outside the housing.
The material of the distensible container is preferably a thin-walled tube of a silicone rubber, for example of 4.0 mm internal diameter and 0.35 mm to 0.5 mm wall thickness to be charged with air at a pressure well above 30 p.s.i. (pounds per square inch). A tube of silicone rubber of 0.35 mm wall thickness will burst if unsupported at 15 p.s.i. and a 0.5 mm thickness tube at 20-30 p.s.i. A suitable operating pressure in practice is 150 p.s.i. which is usually available from the air compressor of a locomotive.
The invention is illustrated by way of example on the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a side elevation and FIG. 2 is a plan of a carbon current-collector block and carrier shoe according to the invention,
FIG. 3 is a cross-section on the line III--III of FIG. 1, and
FIG. 4 is a fragmentary longitudinal section showing a tubular connector for supplying air under pressure to the distensible tube.
As shown by FIGS. 1 and 2, the carbon block 1 is made in sections 1a, with closely-fitting oblique joints 2, held in a shoe 3, which may be of aluminum, of box-section with flanges 4 holding a dovetail-section base of the carbon block tightly against a web plate 5.
Along the middle of the base of the carbon block there is a rectangular channel 6 which, together with the shoe plate 5, provides a housing for a thin distensible tube 7, such as of silicone rubber as mentioned above.
One end of the tube 7 is closed at 8 and the other end 9 fits closely over an air-supply connector pipe 10, of metal or rigid plastics material, around which it is sealed air-tight by a heat-shrunk clamping band 1
REFERENCES:
patent: 3394365 (1968-07-01), Nealis
Hinds William R.
Hubbuch David F.
Morganite Electrical Carbon Limited
Reeves Robert B.
LandOfFree
Electric traction current-collector does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.
If you have personal experience with Electric traction current-collector, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Electric traction current-collector will most certainly appreciate the feedback.
Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-632574