Claims
- 1. A method of forging a bar for overlapping and connecting the ends of aligned railroad rails disposed in end-to-end relation, said bar being elongate and of finite length, including a rail side and a remote side, said bar including an enlarged top portion having a contacting face on said rail side extending axially along the length of said bar for contacting a rail, an enlarged bottom portion having a contacting face on said rail side extending axially along the length of said bar for contacting a portion of a rail in spaced relation to said contacting face on said top portion, and a connecting web portion, said method comprising the steps of:
- providing a pair of dies which are shaped to define the final shape of the bar, including its finite length and respectively the entire rail side and remote side of the intended bar, one of said dies having a forming face conforming to the shape of the entire rail side of the bar and the other of said die having a forming face conforming to the shape of the entire remote side of the bar,
- providing a billet of metal to be formed into said bar, said billet being devoid of any shape corresponding to the final configuration of said bar locating said billet between the die faces and moving at least one of the die faces repeatedly toward the other at a relatively high velocity for a number of successive strikes against the billet to simultaneously form the enlarged top portion and its contacting face, the enlarged bottom portion and its contacting face, the finite length, and the connecting web portion of the bar.
- 2. The method of claim 1 wherein the rails to be joined are of different sizes and the bar is divided longitudinally into a first portion and a second portion joined by a centrally transition portion, said first portion being sized for attachment to one rail and said second portion being sized for attachment to the other rail, said die faces including portions which define the shape of said first and said second and said transition portions of the bar, said method further including simultaneously forming said billet to define said first portion, said second portion, and said transition portion of said bar.
- 3. The method of claim 2 wherein said web portion is of uniform cross-section throughout the length of the bar, said method further including simultaneously forming said billet to define a web portion of uniform cross-section throughout the length of said bar.
- 4. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein such material is a high carbon steel and the billet is originally of a cylindrical shape, and wherein the quenching of the forged bar is in oil.
- 5. A method as claimed in claim 1 including punching holes in the heated bar suited to receive fastening means for connecting to the rails and then quenching the bar.
- 6. A method as claimed in claim 5, wherein said forming step further includes forming contoured faces on the rail side of the bar, simultaneously with forming said top and bottom contact faces, and simultaneously forming a reinforcing rib raised from the elongated web portion and extended transverse to and between said top and bottom contact faces at a location approximately midway between the length of the bar and intermediate of the holes for the fastening means.
- 7. A method as claimed in claim 6, wherein said forming step further includes forming contoured faces on the rail side of the bar and simultaneously forming other reinforcing ribs raised from the elongated web portion and extended transverse to and between the top and bottom contact faces at locations spaced axially from the first mentioned rib and from the holes for the fastening means.
- 8. A method as claimed in claim 7, wherein said forming step further includes forming contoured faces on said rail side of the bar having other reinforcing ribs each with an exterior convex curvature and concave fillets blended between said rib and said web portion.
- 9. A method as claimed in claim 8, wherein said forming step further includes forming a billet comprising high carbon steel and originally having a cylindrical shape.
- 10. A method as claimed in claim 5 wherein said forming step further includes forming contoured faces on the rail side of the bar simultaneously with forming said top and bottom contact faces, and simultaneously forming a reinforcing rib raised from the elongated web portion and extended transverse to and between said top and bottom contact faces at a location approximately midway between the length of the bar and intermediate of the holes for the fastening means.
- 11. A method as claimed in claim 5 wherein the forming step includes forming axially nonaligned contact faces on opposite ends of said bar to cooperate flush against dissimilar rails connected together by the bar, wherein the faces of the rail side die are accordingly nonaligned axially of one another.
- 12. A method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the forming step further includes forming contoured faces on said bar having a reinforcing rib on the rail side of the bar, simultaneously upon reforming the billet to the bar, said rib being extended transverse to and between the top and bottom portions of the bar and intermediate of the holes for the fastening means.
- 13. A method as claimed in claim 12 wherein the forming step further includes forming other contoured faces on the rail side of the bar providing other reinforcing ribs on the rail side of the bar, simultaneously upon reforming the billet to the bar, said ribs being extended transverse to and between the top and bottom portions of the bar and at locations spaced axially from the first mentioned rib.
- 14. A method as claimed in claim 12, wherein said forming step further includes forming contoured faces on the rail side of the bar that extend generally axially and laterally of the bar and that blend smoothly between the corresponding faces on the opposite bar ends, effective to define a transition region on the bar between the bar contact faces.
- 15. A method of forging a bar for overlapping and connecting the ends of aligned railroad rails disposed in end-to-end relation, having a rail side, a remote side and a finite length formed by the steps of:
- providing a pair of dies which are shaped to define respectively the entire rail side and remote side of the intended bar, one of said dies having a forming face conforming to the shape of the entire rail side of the bar and the other of said die having a forming face conforming to the shape of the entire remote side of the bar,
- providing a billet of metal to be formed into said bar, locating said billet between the die faces and moving at least one of the die faces repeatedly toward the other at a relatively high velocity for a number of successive strikes against the billet to simultaneously form the shape of the bar and its finite length.
- 16. A bar of claim 15 wherein the rails to be joined are of different sizes and the bar includes a first portion for attachment to one rail and a second portion for attachment to the other rail, with said first portion sized to mate with its associated rail and said second portion sized to mate with its associated rail, said die faces including portions which define the shape of both said first and said second portions of the bar.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation of co-pending application Ser. No. 06/912,266 filed on Sept. 9, 1986, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (8)
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
912266 |
Sep 1986 |
|