The present application claims the benefit of priority to International Patent Application No. PCT/GB2008/004031 filed Dec. 8, 2008, which further claims the benefits of priorities to Great Britain Patent Application No. 0723862.9 filed Dec. 6, 2007, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
The invention relates to a brake system for a railway vehicle incorporating wheel slide protection.
Railway vehicle braking systems are typically air brakes and may be either single pipe or twin pipe systems. Such systems incorporating wheel slide control and wheel spin control have established themselves in recent years. Both wheel slide and wheel spin stem from low wheel to rail adhesion. Wheel slide typically occurs when braking a railway car and wheel spin when the car is accelerating.
A typical wheel slide control system comprises a plurality of sensors on each axle of the vehicle, which sensors are adapted to measure the speed of rotation of the axle. The sensors are individually wired back to a central vehicle brake control unit. In use, the outputs of the sensors are then fed to the brake control unit, which compares the values with those of adjacent axles and if the difference exceeds a pre-determined limit, releases and re-applies the brake pressure until the speed falls within acceptable limits. This system has proven itself in practice and leads to improved braking performance and reduces the probability of damage to wheels and track. The problem of damage to wheels is particularly severe on freight trains, which as a consequence tend to travel more slowly than would otherwise be possible.
Wheel slide protection increases the air consumption of the brake system by generally anything from four times to ten times the air consumption of the same system without wheel slide protection. This leads to problems, in particular with single pipe brake systems, in that the size of auxiliary reservoirs need to be increased by a similar amount to the air consumption. The charge up time of the brake system also increases and the brake release times also increase, in particular after wheel slide protection activity.
The invention seeks to provide a brake system for a railway vehicle having wheel slide protection which reduces the size of the increase in the auxiliary reservoir and with improved charge up times and release times following wheel slide protection activity.
According to the invention there is provided a brake system for a railway vehicle having wheel slide protection comprising a main brake pipe, which brake pipe is fluidly connected to a distributor, an auxiliary reservoir being fluidly connected to the distributor, the distributor being fluidly connected to one or more brake cylinders, characterised in that a further reservoir is provided, air flow to and from the further reservoir being controllable by a valve, the valve being adapted to supply air to the brakes from the auxiliary reservoir and from the further reservoir.
In the event that wheel slide is detected, the selector valve may control the air to the brakes such that only air from the supplementary reservoir is supplied to the brakes. When the pressure in the supplementary reservoir reaches a predetermined pressure, the valve may switch to permit air to flow from the auxiliary reservoir to the brakes.
The valve may be adapted to control the charging of the supplementary reservoir independently of the charging of the auxiliary reservoir. The valve may charge the auxiliary reservoir before charging the supplementary reservoir or at a preferential rate.
The valve may be a selector valve comprising a first port in fluid connection with the supplementary reservoir and an inlet port in connection with the auxiliary reservoir and an outlet port adapted to supply air to brake cylinders, a further valve being adapted to switch air flow from the inlet port in connection with the auxiliary reservoir to the port in connection with the further reservoir. The selector valve may be provided with an inhibitor valve adapted to isolate the supplementary reservoir from the auxiliary reservoir.
In the event that wheel slide is no longer detected, the valve may switch airflow from the supplementary reservoir to the auxiliary reservoir. After release of the brakes, when the pressure in the auxiliary reservoir reaches a pre-determined limit, the inhibitor valve may open to allow the supplementary reservoir to be recharged. If the brake pressure in the auxiliary reservoir drops below a predetermined limit, wheel slide protection may be disabled. A dump valve may be placed between the distributor and a variable load relay valve, which dump valve controls the pilot pressure to the variable load relay valve.
The system of the invention may be configured to permit a smaller reservoir capacity to be used, reduce charge up time of the brake system, reduce the brake release times and reduce the total air consumption of the system.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the drawings in which:
An auxiliary reservoir 7 is provided which stands in fluid communication via a first outlet port with the brake distributor 2 and also in fluid communication via a second outlet port with each of the relay valves 3,4. The auxiliary reservoir pressure is protected by a check valve in the distributor 2. The solid lines show the arrangement in use on a single pipe system. Shown in dashed lines is a further conduit 9 connected to the auxiliary reservoir 7 at the second outlet port, having an isolating cock and check valve 10, which leads to a main reservoir pipe 11. The conduit 9, check valve 10 and main reservoir 11 would be present in a twin pipe system. In use, the auxiliary reservoir 7 stores the energy, in the form of compressed air, used to apply the brakes. The auxiliary reservoir 7 is charged using the air supply in the brake pipe 1.
Pressure in the dummy cylinder or brake cylinder lines can be used as a signal for the changeover of air supply recharge from one reservoir to another. The valve 22 further comprises an integral check valve to prevent loss of air from the auxiliary reservoir to the supplementary reservoir 20. The valve 22 can be operated either pneumatically or electrically.
If the auxiliary reservoir pressure is seen to drop to the minimum safety requirement threshold level, during WSP activity, the WSP function will be disabled in both dump valves. This state will remain until the AR and SR pressures have been reinstated to a pre-determined level capable of supporting WSP activity.
In the event that the embodiment is used with a twin pipe system, a further conduit 28 with an isolating cock and check valve 29 enables fluid communication between the main reservoir pipe 11 and the conduit 21 between the WSP reservoir 20 and the selector valve 22. In the two pipe arrangement the first pipe transmits the brake demand and the second optional pipe delivers the air supply.
In at least one embodiment, the auxiliary reservoir and the supplementary reservoir are depleted simultaneously. Alternatively, the valve could also switch to the supplementary reservoir for wheel slide protection and back to the auxiliary reservoir for emergency braking such as by running the supplementary reservoir pressure down below the emergency brake lower limit pressure. After application of the brakes, the selector valve provides for the auxiliary reservoir to be charged before the supplementary reservoir by isolating the supplementary reservoir from the air supply, thereby enabling the train to pull away in an acceptable time. The valve can then switch state to charge the supplementary reservoir.
In use, air passes from the main brake pipe 1 through the brake distributor 2 and the auxiliary reservoir 7 and enters the selector valve 22 via the second port 24. Air passes through the inhibitor valve 33 in the open position and the choke 34 to the first port 23 to charge the WSP reservoir 20.
To apply the brakes, the brake distributor dummy cylinder pressure initiates a brake application on the relay valve (or variable load valve) control chamber. Air flows rapidly through the selector valve 22 from the second port 24 connected to the auxiliary reservoir 7 to the third port 25 to allow the brake cylinders to fill through the relay valves 3,4. The dummy cylinder pressure at the fourth port 26 closes the inhibitor valve 33 thereby isolating the WSP reservoir 20 from the auxiliary reservoir 7.
In the event that WSP sensors detect wheel slide during brake application, the WSP brake control unit energises the solenoid valve 31, which passes the auxiliary reservoir pressure 7 to the change-over valve piston to connect the first port 23 and the WSP reservoir 20 to the third port 25, isolating the auxiliary reservoir 7 from the brake cylinders.
When the WSP sensors detect that wheel slide is no longer present, the WSP brake control unit de-energises the solenoid valve 31, which vents the auxiliary reservoir pressure from the change-over valve piston to connect the second port 24 back to the third port 25.
The WSP control unit is adapted such that it can only energise the solenoid valve 31 when both the low WSP pressure switch 35 and the low auxiliary reservoir switch 32 are in the open position.
The low WSP pressure switch 35 is set to a level below full service braking pressure to utilise the stored energy in the WSP reservoir 20. Once the WSP reservoir is depleted to this level the WSP control unit de-energises the solenoid valve 31 and inhibits WSP control.
The low auxiliary reservoir switch 32 is set at a level to ensure that a full service braking application is available from the auxiliary reservoir. Once the auxiliary reservoir is depleted to this level, WSP control is again inhibited.
The WSP control unit can control the selector valve to switch between the auxiliary reservoir 7 and the WSP reservoir 20 as required until WSP inhibit thresholds are reached.
During release of the brakes, the auxiliary reservoir 7 is re-charged with air from the main pipe 1 and the re-charging is proportional to the ratio of the brake cylinder pressure to the dummy cylinder pressure until this ratio falls to 0.2 bar at which point the inhibitor valve 33 re-opens thereby allowing air to re-fill the WSP reservoir 20 through the choke 34. This permits the brake release to be achieved without having to charge the WSP reservoir 20, thereby reducing the time that the train is stopped on the rail system.
The brake distributor 2 vents the auxiliary reservoir 7 and the brake cylinders in the known manner. Venting of the WSP reservoir is automatically achieved during blow down when the pressure at the fourth port 26 reduces to allow the inhibitor valve 33 to open and allow air to pass back through the distributor 2 via the auxiliary reservoir 7. During reverse flow through the selector valve 22 from the WSP reservoir 20 to the distributor 2, the check valve 36 bypasses the choke 34 which reduce the discharge time.
As with
The embodiments of
The system described advantageously ensures that a full service braking application from the auxiliary reservoir is available, in the event of low WSP pressure. The system also advantageously inhibits the charging of the WSP reservoir during application and release of the brakes.
Although the system has been specifically described as having a WSP reservoir, it would be possible to have a plurality of interconnected WSP or supplementary reservoirs. Operation of the control valve can be achieved by pneumatic control only or electrically. Wheel slide protection (WSP) in this application also includes wheel flat protection (WFP). Typically, the system can operate on a per car, per bogie or per axle basis, in which case the system has one dump valve per car, one per bogie or per axle, respectively.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0723862.9 | Dec 2007 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB08/04031 | 12/8/2008 | WO | 00 | 8/12/2010 |