The present invention relates to railroad freight cars, and in particular to the structure of a car intended to carry intermodal freight containers in a container well.
Railroad cars have been used to carry intermodal freight containers for decades. Many such cars can carry a pair of short containers end-to-end in a container well defined by a pair of spaced-apart side sills, as shown, for example, in Hill, et al., U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,893,567, 5,054,403, and 5,170,718; Hill, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,599,949 and 4,703,699; Tylisz, et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,085,152; Zaerr, et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,510,800; and Smith, et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,546,878. While such cars must be built sufficiently strong to support the weight of loaded containers, as well as being capable of sustaining the forces imposed on a car during operation of a railroad train, it is desirable to minimize the weight of each car itself, so that it can carry a greater weight of revenue producing laden containers without exceeding the maximum weight permitted to be imposed on a railroad track.
In such container well cars side sills serve both as side walls of a container well and to carry the many dynamic forces imposed by movement of the car as part of a train. The side sills also have to carry the bending loads resulting from the weight of containers carried in the well or stacked atop a container or a pair of containers carried in the well. A pair of short containers carried end-to-end in the well impose part of their weight on the side sills near the middle of the length of the container well. The side sills must thus be able to sustain the weight of the adjacent ends of a pair of short containers located in the middle of the length of the container well.
Because of the overall size limitations within which a loaded railway car must fit, as a result of the clearances along a railway and the configuration of conventional side-loading equipment available for loading containers onto railroad cars, only a limited space is available within which the side sill structures of a container-carrying railroad freight car may be constructed. Nevertheless, the side sills must have sufficient strength to support the vertical beam loads applied when the car is laden, and to resist torsional and axial stresses resulting from the loads applied during travel of a laden car, while the weight of the side sill structures should be kept to a minimum consistent with the required strength.
Since cargo containers are placed between the side sills of a well car, structural interconnection between the top edges of the side sills is prevented, and each side sill must have sufficient torsional rigidity to prevent structural failure when such a well car is laden. This is particularly true when two shorter containers, such as 20-foot containers, are carried end-to-end in a container well of such a car, applying substantial vertical loading midway between the supporting trucks of the car.
According to the present disclosure, a railroad freight car, defined by the claims which are appended hereto, is provided in which to carry a pair of freight containers of greater weight than could previously be carried end-to-end in a container well of a car of similar weight, with a container well car side sill structure only slightly greater in weight than was previously needed to carry a significantly lighter lading.
In one embodiment of a container-carrying railroad freight car, lightweight but strong side sills include a thin metal side plate, to which is welded a channel member of thin metal plate. A web portion of the channel may be vertical, parallel with the side plate, and the combined structure can provide a rigid side sill generally of a box beam form similar to that disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,703,699, of which the disclosure is hereby incorporated herein by reference. The side sills may be supported by body bolsters of a well known design, such as one similar to that described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,703,699.
Container supporting structures may be supported by the side sills at mid-length of the container well to support the adjacent ends of a pair of short containers carried end-to-end in the container well, such as a pair of containers each 20 feet long. Each side sill may include a reinforcement plate extending along the interior of the box beam and extending longitudinally in each direction from the mid-length portion of the container well. The reinforcement may include vertical and laterally extending portions lying alongside and in contact against interior surfaces of the web and laterally extending flange portions of the channel member at the top and bottom of the side sill, and the vertical portion of the reinforcement extends further from the mid length portion of the side sill toward each end of the side sill than does the laterally extending portion. Extreme end portions of the reinforcement are fastened to the web of the channel member, so that stresses are carried by the reinforcement to portions of the web of the channel member where application of those stresses will not overload the material of the channel member.
The foregoing and other features and advantages of the disclosed car will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to the drawings which form a part of the disclosure, a lightweight container car 20 may include a single car body with a wheeled truck and a conventional coupler at each end, or may, as shown in
In
Each end car unit 24 includes a pair of side sills 38 which are rigidly connected to body bolsters 40 and 42. The body bolster 42 is connected to a stub center sill to which one half of an articulating coupling is attached, while the other half of the articulating coupling is attached to an opposite stub center sill of the adjacent intermediate car unit 22. At the opposite outer end of the end car unit 24 the body bolster 40 is rigidly connected to a stub center sill 44 which is connected to the conventional coupler 26.
Each of the units 22 and 24 of the well car 20 includes a container well 34 and at least the end car unit 24 can carry one 40-foot container (not shown) or two or more intermodal freight containers, such as two nominal 20-foot containers 32 within the container well 34 and a 45-foot container 36 stacked atop the 20-foot containers 32 or the 40-foot container.
The container well 34 is defined within each well car unit 22 or 24, as may be seen with respect to the end unit 22 in
As best shown in
As illustrated in
It will be appreciated that the car 20 described above cannot have a center sill because the lower surface of the container must be positioned close to the tracks, below the level of a center sill, to provide room for an upper container 36. The width of the space available for a car side sill 38 is limited by the width of the containers to be carried, usually either 8 feet or 8½ feet, thus defining the inner dimension of the side sills, while the outer dimension is determined by a clearance envelope defined for the car to permit the car to operate on available railroads. The maximum side sill height is determined by conventional side loading equipment for loading containers onto the car, and sufficient clearance beneath the side sills 38 must also be provided.
All of these above-mentioned factors serve to produce a very small envelope into which a side sill must fit; yet it must be of adequate strength. To have strength to resist vertical bending loads, the side sills 38 are made as deep as possible; and to resist localized warping and buckling, a closed section is efficient. As a closed section, for a decrease in weight the thickness of the material of its members must decrease, and as the thickness decreases local warping of the thin members may become a problem. Torsional rigidity is important, as the opposite side sills 38 are connected to one another only by the truss-type framework 48 connecting the bottoms of the side sills. The side sills 38 must therefore be rigid enough to be self-supporting against lateral and torsional stress when the car is fully loaded.
In the embodiment disclosed herein, each side sill 38 includes a generally flat outer plate 60 and a channel member 62 located on an inner side of the flat outer plate 60, that is, on the side of the plate 60 facing laterally inwardly toward the interior of the container well 34. The channel 62 may be constructed of thin flat metal plate bent to include a pair of laterally-extending flanges, a top flange 64 and a lower, or bottom, flange 66, interconnected through bends 67 with a web portion 68 that extends parallel with the flat plate 60. The flat plate 60 and the channel 62 are interconnected securely with each other, as by the outer margins of the flanges 64 and 66 being welded to the plate 60, and also by the web 68 being connected to the plate 60 by connecting members such as stiffening rings in the form of tubes 69 extending between and fastened to both the plate 60 and the web 68 of the channel 62.
To accommodate the tubes 69, the channel 62 may define a plurality of evenly-spaced large holes 70 as shown in the drawings, although the holes 70 could instead be defined in the plate 60. The stiffening rings or tubes 69 effectively prevent local warping and also contribute to section strength to resist bending and torsion. Even though holes 70 are introduced in the web material of the channel member, the tubes 69 added in this area put back more strength into the side sill member than would be present if the material had not been removed to provide the holes 70. The rings or tubes 69 allow construction of a deep, strong side sill with vertical load capabilities, which is able to resist local warping and buckling, and which has sufficient torsional rigidity. An adequate number of the connecting tubes 69 are provided to prevent local buckling movement of the relatively thin plate metal material of which the channel 62 and plate 60 are constructed, so that the side sill 38 consequently has a high load-bearing strength and sufficient torsional rigidity while still being relatively light in weight.
In one embodiment, twelve elliptical holes 70, each having a major axis 72 of about 24 inches and a minor axis 74 of about 20 inches and thus an area of about 377 square inches, are spaced about 30¾ inches apart from one another, center-to-center. Material removed from each hole 70 thus weighs about 36.7 pounds. It will be appreciated that the holes 70 could be of a circular shape, but elliptical tubes may provide the best reduction of weight of the channel. It is not critical that all the holes 70 be of equal size, be equally spaced, or be located in a single straight line for the benefits of this type of structure to be gained.
As may be seen in
The reinforcements 80 disclosed herein are provided at both the top and the bottom of the channel member 62 of the side sill and are attached to the channel member 62 in such a way that the stresses developed in the reinforcements 80 are carried to a part of the channel member 62 of the side sill 38 where stresses are less than in the outermost fibers of the top flange 64 or bottom flange 66 of the channel 62.
As shown in
Each reinforcement 80 has an inner margin 82, that is, the longitudinal margin extending horizontally along the length of the side sill and located nearer to the neutral plane 83, or mid-height, of the respective side sill 38. The inner margin 82 extends over the entire length 84 of the reinforcement 80, from one extreme end 86 to the opposite extreme end 86 of the reinforcement. The reinforcement 80 has a vertical part 88 lying closely against the inner face of the web 68 of the side sill channel member 62, and a laterally extending part 90 lying closely along the top flange 64 or bottom flange 66 of the channel member 62. A bend portion 92 extends longitudinally along the reinforcement and is shaped to correspond with the bend portion 67 of the channel member 62 where the top flange 64 or bottom flange 66 extends from the web portion 68 toward the plate member 60 of the side sill structure. An outer margin 94 of the reinforcement 80 lies along the respective flange 64 or 66 of the channel member 62.
As may be seen in
As shown in
The stresses carried by the reinforcement 80 from mid-length of the container well 34 to the side sill channel member 62 are thus applied to the web 68 of the channel member 62 at a location where the web 68 is not exposed to maximum stresses, and where transfer of those stresses from the reinforcement 80 into the web 68 of the side sill channel 62 will not overload the material of the web 68. By tapering the end portions of the reinforcement 80 the stresses developed in the reinforcement 80 near the mid-length portion of the side sill 38 are directed from the outer margin 94 of the reinforcement 80 to the extreme end portions 86 where they are attached to the web 68 of the channel 62. As a result, the reinforcement 80 does not need to extend as far along either the top flange 64 or bottom flange 66 to reach a location where the forces carried by the reinforcement 80 could be transferred to the channel member 62 without overloading either the top flange 64 or the bottom flange 66 at the point of such attachment. The reinforcement 80 is thus able to be made shorter, and thus adds less weight in the side sill 38 than if it extended further along the top or bottom flange 64 or 66.
Additional reinforcing plates 100 may be attached to the inner surface of the side sill plate member 60, adjacent the location where the central container support member 58 is attached to the bottom of the side sill 38. Transversely oriented reinforcement plates 102 may be provided in the bottom portion of the side sill 38, aligned with the ends of the mid-length container support structure 58.
A smaller reinforcement 103, shown in
As may be seen in
In one satisfactory sequence of construction the reinforcements 80 are welded to the inner surface of the channel member 62. The short elliptical tubes 69 are then welded to the inside of the web 68 of the channel 62, in positions aligned concentrically with the holes 70, whose edges may overhang into the tubes 69 a small distance, and the plates 104 are installed between tubes 69. Thereafter, the flanges 64 and 66 of channel 62 are welded to the plate 60, and the other ends of the tubes 69 are welded to the plate 60, as best shown in
In one embodiment of the side sill 38 the outer plate 60 may be of steel of about 5/16 inch in thickness, and the channel 62 may be of steel plate having a thickness of about 11/32 inch, for a car unit 24 intended to carry a pair of 20-foot containers 32 between the side sills 38. An exemplary side sill 38 of this design may have a depth 106 of about 42 inches, and a width 108 of about 6 inches.
The cylindrical tubes 69, in one embodiment of the side sills 38, are constructed by rolling rectangular pieces of steel having a thickness 110 of about 3/16 inch into an elliptical ring shape, the butt ends being welded together to complete the tube. The length 112 of the tubes 69 is about 6 inches, less the combined thicknesses of the plate 60 and channel 62, or 5 11/32 inches. The weight of each of the tubes 69 is thus about 20.6 pounds, and is thus less than the weight of the material removed from the channel 62 in forming the hole 70.
In this case, the total weight of the set of reinforcements 80 and the set of smaller reinforcements 103 for a container car unit 24 is only about 650 pounds greater than the previously used side sill reinforcements. Thus the thin-walled side sills 38 as disclosed herein possess increased strength sufficient to support a pair of short containers 32 carried end-to-end in the container well 34 with a total of about 14 tons greater weight, with only a minimum increase of car body weight beyond that of a car unit designed to carry a pair of significantly lighter containers end-to-end in the container well 34.
The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.