The present invention relates to railroad hopper cars, and particularly to a gravity outlet cargo discharge gate arrangement in a hopper car that may be shorter in overall length than previously known hopper cars with the same volumetric cargo capacity.
Most conventional railroad hopper cars have two or three or more separate cargo-containing hoppers, with each hopper having a separate, rectangular, cargo discharge chute and an associated cargo discharge gate. Various funnel-like arrangements of slope sheets have conventionally defined a chute to guide bulk cargo to a respective discharge gate. A pair of slope sheets conventionally define a transversely-extending ridge structure in such a railroad hopper car to define separate longitudinally adjacent hoppers and to guide cargo within each hopper toward a respective discharge gate. A significant amount of space is defined beneath such a transversely-extending ridge.
The gravity outlet cargo discharge gates in conventional railroad hopper cars may be about three feet square to direct bulk cargo such as grain flowing from a hopper into a receptacle that may be no wider than the space between the rails on which the hopper car is supported. Emptying the cargo from a hopper car with such a discharge gate may require the car to be moved to place each cargo discharge gate, in turn, above a receptacle for a long enough time for all the cargo in the particular hopper to flow into the receptacle. It is desirable, however, to be able to unload the cargo from a hopper car quickly, so as to enable all of the cars of a train to be unloaded without a great deal of delay.
A gravity outlet cargo discharge assembly may typically include a sliding discharge gate, a horizontal closure member that supports the weight of cargo when the gate is closed, and so a certain amount of force is required to open such a gravity outlet cargo discharge gate. US railroad operating rules limit the amount of force that should be required to open a cargo discharge gate. In some railroad hopper cars including a larger gravity outlet cargo discharge structure a shed plate is located above the gate and partially supports the weight of cargo, but space is provided for cargo to flow onto the gate and through the cargo discharge opening when the gate is opened. As a result of that structure, the weight of cargo actually supported by the closed gate is somewhat reduced, thereby reducing the force needed to open the gate.
Some railroad hopper cars have been constructed recently to define only two hoppers, one being located at each of the opposite ends of such a hopper car. The hoppers of such cars are separated, however, by a pair of slope sheets forming a large, transversely oriented ridge between the hoppers. In some such hopper cars large gravity outlet cargo discharge gate assemblies have been provided, allowing cargo to be discharged from each of the hoppers into receptacles that are wider than the space between the rails. Such a pair of cargo discharge gate assemblies may extend longitudinally through a significant part of the length of such a car, between its wheeled trucks, but a significant amount of space is defined beneath the pair of slope sheets separating the hoppers and unusable to contain cargo. Cargo space equal to the unusable space beneath such a pair of slope sheets can be provided in a car designed to satisfy a particular set of clearance plate requirements only by providing a sufficiently long car body.
In some places the length of a railroad train is limited by regulations, or by the available length of sidings or parallel track sections where one train can wait temporarily while another train passes by. In some cases, carrying a greater amount of cargo on a train of such a limited length would lead to more efficient use of locomotive power. It may therefore be advantageous to be able to load a certain amount of cargo onto a shorter car and include a larger number of such shorter cars in a train not exceeding a prescribed length, to carry a greater amount of cargo weight in a train of a particular length and thereby make practical use of more of the power that is available from the number of locomotives required.
What is needed, then, is a railroad hopper car that is shorter in length than previously available hopper cars capable of carrying the same volume and weight of cargo; it is also desirable for such a car to be able to quickly discharge its cargo.
The present invention, defined by the claims that form a part of the present disclosure, provides an answer to some of the needs explained above by providing a railroad hopper car that is significantly shorter than a conventional railroad hopper car that has the same volumetric cargo capacity, and that has an ability to discharge bulk cargo more quickly than previous hopper cars.
In one embodiment of the hopper car disclosed herein there is but a single cargo-carrying hopper that extends over the length of the car body, so that the hopper car has no large transversely-extending ridge formed by slope sheets separating individual hoppers from one another.
An aspect of one embodiment of the hopper car disclosed herein is a cargo hopper outlet portion including a discharge gate assembly extending over a majority of the length of the car body between the wheeled trucks supporting each end of the car body.
In one embodiment of the hopper car disclosed herein the cargo hopper outlet portion includes a cargo discharge gate assembly, including a plurality of cargo discharge openings spaced apart from one another along the length of the car body, and an associated unitary multi-gate closure assembly includes a like plurality of gate closure members connected with each other and movable as a unit, to open or close all of the cargo discharge openings simultaneously.
In one embodiment of the hopper car disclosed herein a unitary multi-gate closure assembly includes a pair of opposite longitudinal side rails each extending over the entire length of the unitary gate assembly on a respective lateral side, and all the individual gate closure members are connected to both of the longitudinal rails.
In one embodiment of the hopper car disclosed herein each of the individual cargo discharge openings has a width dimension that is greater than its length dimension. The individual cargo discharge openings are separated from one another along the length of the car body by a distance that may be about equal to or slightly greater than the length of each cargo discharge opening.
In one embodiment of the hopper car disclosed herein the cargo hopper outlet portion includes a pair of rows of cargo discharge openings extending alongside each other on opposite lateral sides of a longitudinal centerline of the car body, and a separate cargo discharge gate assembly is associated with each of the rows of cargo discharge openings.
The foregoing and other objectives and features of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the drawings which form a part of the disclosure herein, as shown in
The car body 22 may incorporate one or more transverse bulkheads 44 and 46, shown in
A respective one of the slope sheets 38 and 40 defines each end of the hopper 42, and the car body 22 has space beneath each slope sheet where equipment related to the operability of the hopper car 20 may be mounted above the respective wheeled truck 24 or 26. The slope sheets 38 and 40 serve to guide cargo as it slides downward to a hopper outlet portion 50 of the hopper 42, and they also allow cargo to be carried in the hopper 42 in much of the space above the locations of the wheeled trucks 24 and 26.
As shown in
As may be seen in
A pair of side sills 64 and 66 extend from the body bolster 58 to the body bolster 60 on respective sides of the car body 22. In a slightly different hopper car (not shown) there may be a stub center sill at each end of the car body 22, and instead of a center sill 60 extending through the entire length of the car body 22 the side sills 64 and 66 may be substantial enough to carry loads including bending forces and longitudinal train forces that might otherwise be carried by a center sill, as will be understood.
At the bottom of each of the hopper outlet portions 50 a longitudinally extending vertical side member 68 or 70 of the hopper outlet portion 50 extends from one end 54 to the other end 56 of the hopper outlet portion 50. The side members 68 and 70 may be steel plates of appropriate dimensions. The longitudinally extending hopper outlet portion vertical side members 68 and 70 extend along the bottom of each side wall of the car body and along an opposite side of the hopper outlet portion 50 nearer to the center sill 60. A cargo discharge gate longitudinal support member 72 or 74 extends along a bottom margin of each of the longitudinally extending vertical side members 68 and 70. The discharge gate assembly support members 72 and 74 may, for example be of angle iron or similar material welded to the longitudinal side members of the hopper outlet portion so as to have a downwardly-facing flat surface 76.
Each cargo discharge gate assembly 52 includes several transversely extending hopper bottom structures 78 which may have the form of cargo shed structures of similar size and shape. The hopper bottom cargo shed structures 78 extend between the vertical sides 68 and 70 of the hopper outlet portions 50, and may be welded to the vertical side members 68 and 70 to interconnect the opposite sides of the hopper outlet portion 50 with each other at regularly spaced intervals. The hopper bottom or cargo shed structures 78 thus may be integral structural members of the respective hopper outlet portion 50, and should therefore have sufficient strength to support the generally downward forces generated by grain or other bulk cargo carried in the hopper car 20. Each of the bulkheads 44 and 46 may extend upwardly from one of the cargo shed structures between cargo discharge gate openings.
The hopper bottom cargo shed structures 78 define and separate a plurality of similar cargo discharge openings 80, for example, at least 6 cargo discharge openings 80 that are aligned with each other and spaced apart from one another uniformly along the length of the hopper outlet portion 50. Each of the cargo discharge openings 80 may have a length 82, slightly less than a length 84 of each cargo shed structure. In a car body having a length 32 of 44 feet, for example, the length of the hopper discharge portion may be about 27 feet, and there may be, for example, 13 of the cargo shed structures 78 and 14 cargo discharge openings 80, including a cargo discharge opening 80 at each end 54 and 56 of the hopper outlet portion 50.
The hopper bottom cargo shed structures 78 may be of steel of other metal plate or sheet material and have the form of transversely-extending ridges whose opposite faces 86 and 88 are sloped to ensure that the intended type of bulk cargo slides downward along each cargo shed structure 78 toward an adjacent cargo discharge opening 80 as cargo is unloaded from the hopper car 20. Each of the cargo shed structures 78 may have a length 84 of, for example, about 11 inches, and each of the cargo discharge openings 80 may have a length 82 of about 10.5 inches. A vertical flange 90 or 92 may extend downward beneath each sloping face 86 and 88 of the cargo shed structure.
A unitary multi-gate closure assembly 94, shown separately in
Each gate closure member 100 has a width 108, extending transversely of the car body 22, about equal to the distance between the longitudinal side members 68 and 70 of the hopper outlet portion 50. When the cargo discharge gate assembly 52 is in a closed condition, the length 104 of each of the gate closure members 100 spans the length 82 of the respective cargo discharge opening 80 between consecutive ones of the hopper bottom cargo shed members 78, and each gate closure member 100 closes a respective cargo discharge opening 80. When the unitary multi-gate closure assembly 100 is in a partially open position, as shown in
As seen best in
The unitary multi-gate closure assembly 94 is preferably more flexible than the car body 22 in response to the weight of cargo in the hopper 42, as might be seen in a vertical, longitudinal, plane. Thus, should the bending forces on the car body 22 resulting from the weight of cargo result in some downward deflection of the slide plates 118 in the mid-length part of the car body 22, the unitary multi-gate closure assembly 94 will be able to accommodate such changes in the path along which the multi-gate closure assembly must slide between a closed condition and an open condition.
The slide plates 118 and spacers 120 may be attached to the outwardly extending flanges of the discharge gate assembly longitudinal support members 72 and 74 by fasteners 122 such as huck bolts or rivets, so that by removing the fasteners 122 the slide plate 118 can be removed along either or both sides of the hopper outlet portion 50, allowing the unitary multi-gate closure assembly 94 to be lowered and removed laterally from its normal position closely beneath the transverse hopper bottom cargo shed structures 78 in the event that repair is needed. This simplifies repair of the cargo discharge gate assembly, since the unitary multi-gate closure assembly 94 does not need to be withdrawn from an end of the hopper outlet portion, which would require the car body 22 to be raised clear of one of the wheeled trucks 24, 26.
Transverse flexible seals 124 that press upon the top 102 of each gate closure member 100 of the unitary multi-gate closure assembly 94 are mounted on and extend along the vertical flange portions 90 and 92 of each of the transverse bottom cargo shed structures 78. The seals 124 may be strips of fabric-reinforced elastomeric material, such as or similar to flat drive belting material. An upper portion of each seal 124 may be fastened to the respective vertical flange 90 or 92 of a transverse hopper bottom cargo shed structure 78 by a seal mounting bar 126 of suitable metal, bolted or riveted to the vertical flange portion 90 or 92 of the hopper bottom cargo shed structure. A lower margin portion of each seal 124 depends and presses on the top 102 of the adjacent gate closure member 100, as may be seen best in
The unitary multi-gate closure assembly 94 is supported as explained above in a manner that permits it to slide with respect to the sides 68 and 70 of the hopper outlet portion 50 between its position in the closed condition of the cargo discharge gate assembly 52, shown in
A suitable supply of fluid under pressure, such as compressed air, is made available to the cylinder-and-piston assembly 130 and the necessary conduits and valves (not shown) are provided to control operation. While an externally available supply of fluid such as compressed air may be connected to an individual hopper car 20 and used to operate the cargo discharge gate assembly 52, an auxiliary train line may preferably to provide a supply of compressed air from the locomotive of a unit train several similar hopper cars 20.
As shown in
With the piston retracted into the cylinder 130 as shown in
The arrangement of the cylinder and piston assembly 130 shown in
The gate drive crank arm 136 may be located and oriented as shown in
In an alternative arrangement, shown in
As shown in
In such a hopper car 20 in which the total width of the hopper outlet portion 50 of the car is greater than the distance between the rails on which the wheeled trucks of the car are situated, discharge of cargo from the car requires that there be a cargo-receiving bin having a width approaching the overall width 37 of the car body itself. While such a car would be able to discharge its cargo quickly, there are still many rail terminals where such a cargo-receiving bin is not available, and cargo must be discharged into a cargo-receiving bin through an opening between the rails on which the car is located.
For a hopper car 20′ that is intended for use in service where such a limited cargo-receiving width may be all that is currently available, the car body 22 may be equipped, as shown in
Where it is anticipated that a hopper car 20″ will be required to discharge cargo into a cargo-receiving bin of limited width throughout the entire service life of the car 20″, a single cargo discharge gate assembly 52 may be located centrally with respect to the width 37 of the hopper car, as shown in
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.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/110,015, filed Aug. 23, 2018. The complete disclosure of the above application is hereby incorporated by reference for all purposes.
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Number | Date | Country |
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104875756 | Sep 2015 | CN |
Entry |
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Australian Railroad Group, Vehicle Data Sheet—XT Class, 1 page, (prior to Mar. 26, 2018). |
Australian Railroad Group, Vehicle Data Sheet—XU Class, 1 page, (prior to Mar. 26, 2018). |
Photograph of CBHS Group Australian railroad hopper car 01077c, dated Feb. 10, 2012, 1 page. |
United Group Rail, “Aluminum Grain Freight Vehicle XT” (Westrail 1999-2001), photograph from Mar. 2009 product brochure, 1 page. |
United Group Rail, “Coal Hopper Freight Vehicle NHFF (100 Tonne)” (State Rail Authority of NSW, 1982-1984), photograph from Mar. 2009 product brochure, 1 page. |
United Group Rail, “Coal Hopper Freight Vehicle NHKF (100 Tonne)” (State Rail Authority of NSW, 1987-1988), photograph from Mar. 2009 product brochure, 1 page. |
Australian Railroad Group Pty Ltd, “Wagon Class XU Grain Hopper Wagon”, Drawing No. 60295,1 page, Sep. 19, 2003. |
Australian Railroad Group Pty Ltd, “Wagon Class XT Grain Hopper Wagon”, Drawing No. 60289,1 page, Sep. 23, 2003. |
Westrail, “‘XT’ Class Grain Wagon”, CME DRG No. CME 31813, 1 page, (prior to Mar. 26, 2018). |
Office Action prepared by the United States Patent and Trademark Office for U.S. Appl. No. 16/110,015, filed Jul. 21, 2020, 11 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20210146967 A1 | May 2021 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16110015 | Aug 2018 | US |
Child | 17160721 | US |