The present invention relates to a low profile portable derail used in the railroad industry. The subject derail is a lightweight derail which may be readily installed by a single workman without the need for special tools to make the installation. The derail is capable of derailing not only a railroad car, but also a locomotive. The derail may be readily removed when there is no longer the need for the derail.
The utilization of derails in the railroad industry is well known and accepted. Typically, derails are used to prevent railroad equipment, such as a car or a locomotive from passing a certain point. The need for protecting a certain point from passage by equipment is created under a number of circumstances. A typical circumstance is one wherein workmen are working a car which is positioned at a given track. The requirement of safety and prevention of accidental injury to workmen is paramount. A typical and accepted method of prevention of movement of a car being repaired is to position a derail on the track with the car. Typically, a blue flag is positioned on the track to serve notice that entry of railroad equipment upon the track is prohibited. However, to protect against a failure to observe the blue flag, a derail is mounted on a rail which causes a car or locomotive to be displaced from the track so that it does not engage the protected car.
Derails are well known in the railroad art. It is desirable to provide a lightweight derail which may be moved by a single workman. An example of a known derail is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,105,906, issued Aug. 22, 2000, to Pease, et al. It is particularly advantageous for a derail to not only be moved by a single workman, but it is also advantageous for the derail to be installed by a single workman without the need for special tools. Thus, the installation of the derail is simplified resulting in improvement of the efficiency of the installation.
A derail must have a low profile so that it is not engaged by a track clearing equipment on a locomotive and pushed along the rail thereby failing to accomplish its basic purpose of stopping movement of a locomotive past a given point.
It is further necessary to provide a derail which will make solid contact with a tie thereby preventing movement of the derail along a rail.
The instant derail is a low profile light weight portable derail, which may be readily installed by a single workman. It is readily securable to a railroad rail head for derailing from the rail head a flanged wheel of railroad equipment. The present derail has a monolithic derail body including a flat rider plate and a curved holding channel formed integral with an edge of the rider plate. The curved holding channel forms a continuous member with the rider plate eliminating any stress points which may cause breaking or other damage to the derail body. The curved opening of the holding channel is large enough to receive a portion of the field side of the rail head. At least three field side thumbscrews are mounted on the holding channel and are connectable with the underside of the field side of the rail head to secure the rider plate to the rail head. A substantially straight rub bar is fixed to the rider plate for engagement with a flanged wheel to be derailed from the rail head. The rub bar has a flat straight derail edge which is engagable with a wheel. A locking pad is fixed to the underside of the rider plate and is spaced away from the holding channel to allow positioning of the derail body onto the rail head. A swing arm is pivotedly mounted on the locking pad. A retainer fastener is mounted on the swing arm and is connectable with an underside of the gauge side of the rail head for holding the derail onto the rail head. A comb is connected to the derail body for engagement with a tie supporting the rail.
The present derail is described in the following specification and shown in the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the drawings, and especially to
Derail 26 includes a monolithic derail body 40 with a bar assembly 42 mounted on body 40 for engaging a wheel to displace the wheel from a rail head. A securing assembly 44 is mounted on the body to lock the derail body to the gauge side of the rail head. A comb assembly 46 is fixed to the body for engagement with the tie to prevent the derail from sliding along the rail head when the derail is engaged by a wheel of railroad equipment.
The derail body is a single integral part including a substantially flat rider plate 48 with a curved holding channel 50 formed integral with one edge of the rider plate. The monolithic construction of the derail body provides a high strength body free of any points for stress concentration. The bar assembly is mounted on an upper side 52 of the rider plate. The rider plate has an underside 54 which supports securing assembly 44. The channel has three identical thumbscrews 56, 58, and 60 threadedly mounted thereon and engagable with an underside 62 of the field side of the rail head to secure the derail body to the rail head. The use of three thumbscrews assures alignment of the channel with the rail head. A beveled step plate 64 is mounted under rider plate 48 to facilitate entry of a wheel onto the rider plate for engagement with the bar assembly.
Bar assembly 42 includes an elongated rub bar 66. The rub bar is a straight bar having a top edge 68 with a beveled edge 70 joining the top edge. Rub bar 66 is secured in an upright position by a plurality of gussets 72, which are fixed to the upper surface 52 of plate 48 and to the rub bar. The rub bart is set at an angle of 18.63° relative to the channel.
The securing assembly 44, as may be seen in
Comb assembly or restrainer 46 includes a flat base 92 having a plurality of saw teeth 94 on one edge. An elongated tooth-like projection 96 aligned with saw teeth 94 is formed integral with base 92 for engagement with a railroad tie to restrain movement of the derail along the rail. The comb assembly includes a plurality of reinforcing stripes. An elongated back strip 98 is secured to one edge of the base. A forward reinforcing strip 100 is fixed to base 92. A saw tooth brace 102 is fixed to the base adjacent to saw teeth 94. A tooth plate 104 is fixed to the base adjacent to projection 96 to reinforce projection 96.
Derail 26 may be readily installed on rail 24 by a single workman. The derail is lightweight, in that, it weighs 36 pounds, so that it may be handled by a single workman. Comb assembly 46 is inserted into ballast adjacent to the gauge side of the rail with the channel aligned with the rail head. The channel of the derail is placed over the field side of the rail and thumbscrews 56, 58, and 60 are tightened to secure the body of the derail to the rail. The swing arm is swung on the locking pad from an open position as shown in
Once the derail is in position, it is operative to prevent railway equipment from moving along the rail past the derail. The derail, in position, receives the flanged wheel of a railway equipment not shown, so that the wheel rides up beveled plate 64. Even though the wheel has a short climb, the wheel applies a force to the derail in a direction along the length of the rail. Should the derail move along the rail head, saw teeth 54 engages the tie plate and the tie to restrict movement of the derail. In the event that the saw teeth do not prevent the derail from moving along the rail, tooth-like projection 96 engages the tie and prevents further movement. The distance of movement is small and no greater than the distance from the tooth-like projection to the tie in the initial engagement of the wheel with the derail. The wheel then travels over the bevel plate onto rider plate 48 and engages the rub bar. Engagement of the wheel with the rub bar creates a force on the rub bar to move the plate toward the gauge side of the rail. The movement is prevented by the cooperation of the thumbscrews 56, 58, and 60 on the channel with the field side of the rail. The continued movement of the wheel in engagement with the rub bar causes a smooth steady sideways movement of the wheel which causes the other wheel of the pair of well known railroad wheels (not shown herein) to slide off on the gauge side of the rail of the other rail of the pair of rails which make up a well known railroad track. Substantially simultaneously, the wheel in engagement with the rub bar falls off its rail to effect a derailment.
It may be appreciated that derail 26 may be readily removed from the rail. The pad lock or pin is removed from the swing arm and thumbscrews 56, 58, and 60 are loosened so that the derail can be lifted from the rail for transportation to another location or storage. All of which may be effected by a single workman.
The construction of the present derail optimizes the strengths of all of the parts with a minimum of bulk which thereby reduces the weight of the derail to a weight which is manageable by a single workman.
Although a specific embodiment of the herein disclosed invention has been shown in the accompanying drawings and described above, it is readily apparent that those skilled in the art will be able to make modifications and changes in the derail without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. The present invention is limited only by the scope afforded by the accompanying claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1464606 | Hayes | Aug 1923 | A |
1464607 | Hayes | Aug 1923 | A |
1627092 | Hayes | May 1927 | A |
2829246 | Hayes | Apr 1958 | A |
4165060 | Meyer | Aug 1979 | A |
6105906 | Pease et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6178893 | Pease | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6202564 | Hart et al. | Mar 2001 | B1 |
7549611 | Hertel | Jun 2009 | B2 |
20080023592 | Hertel | Jan 2008 | A1 |