Multi-unit railroad freight car for carrying cargo containers between container well units

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6510800
  • Patent Number
    6,510,800
  • Date Filed
    Friday, October 12, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 28, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
A multi-unit railroad freight car and a container-carrying intermediate unit for such a car. The intermediate unit is located between and coupled to each of a pair of well units designed for carrying stacked cargo containers. Coupled ends of the intermediate units and adjacent container well units are supported on a shared truck. The intermediate unit includes a center sill, transverse bolsters atop the center sill, and container supporting arms extending from the bolsters and above body bolsters of the adjacent container well units.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to multi-unit railroad freight cars, and in particular to such a car including container well units.




Within the limits of available space along railroad tracks and the ability of the tracks to support loaded freight cars safely, it is economically desirable to carry as heavy a load of revenue-earning cargo as possible in a given train length. Increased cargo weight for a given train length gives increased cost efficiency, since the train crew wages, train mile and fuel expenses, and locomotive costs are shared by the increased amount of cargo revenue.




Freight cars including multiple well units for carrying stacked intermodal cargo containers are well known. Some of these cars have shared trucks to support adjacent well units. Others use drawbars to interconnect adjacent units that are each fully supported by their own trucks. In both of these types of multi-unit container well cars the large space between the ends of containers carried in adjacent well units results in a significant amount of aerodynamic drag during train operation and leaves a significant portion of the length of a train in which no cargo containers are present.




Within the railroad industry there are regulations in effect limiting the maximum weight of a loaded intermodal cargo container, and railroad cars are designed with ample strength to carry various combinations of capacity of such cargo containers safely and not exceed the capacity of the freight car. For example, containers of nominal 20-foot length are limited to 52,900 pounds, nominal 40-foot containers are limited to 67,200 pounds and nominal 53-foot containers may be designed for either 56,700 pounds or 67,200 pounds.




These maximum weights must be considered when loading a railroad car in order not to overstress the car body or overload its trucks and thus concentrate too much weight on the tracks. As a result, a well unit carrying two fully loaded 20-foot containers may not be able to safely carry a fully loaded 40-foot or longer container in an upper tier.




Utilization of shared trucks between adjacent well units for carrying stacked containers in such multi-unit railroad freight cars also requires restricting the weight or number of containers which can be carried stacked in those adjacent well units carried by a single shared truck, in order to avoid overloading the shared truck. This often results in the unshared truck at each end of such a multi-unit car being significantly under-loaded. As a result, such multi-unit well cars with shared trucks are often loaded to less than the optimum ratio of load weight to the length of a train of such cars.




What is desired, then, is a container-carrying, multi-unit railroad freight car that can be loaded to utilize more fully the available carrying capacity of the trucks with which such a multi-unit car is equipped, and in which the cargo weight for such a car of a given length and container well size is maximized.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention overcomes some of the aforementioned drawbacks and provides an answer to some of the shortcomings of the prior art railroad cars mentioned above by providing a multi-unit railroad freight car for carrying containers, in which at least two container well units each include a container well and have respective body bolster structures adjacent their ends, in which a plurality of shared trucks each support an end of a respective one of the container well unit body bolster structures, an intermediate unit is located between two of the container well units and has a pair of opposite ends each supported on a respective one of the shared trucks supporting an end of an adjacent container well unit, and in which a container support structure included in the intermediate unit extends above the body bolster structure of the end of the adjacent container well unit.




In one embodiment of the invention the multi-unit freight, car has an intermediate unit that includes an elongate center sill including opposite sill ends and has an articulating coupler associated with each of the opposite sill ends.




One aspect of the invention is the provision of a multi-unit railroad freight car including an intermediate unit that includes a pair of transverse bolsters each attached to a center sill, and in which at least one of the transverse bolsters includes a side bearing support arm aligned with a corresponding side bearing foundation located on a respective shared truck.




In one embodiment of the invention an intermediate unit for a multi-unit railroad freight car includes a pair of container support arms associated with each of the opposite ends of the intermediate unit, and a portion of each container support arm is located above an end structure such as a body bolster of the adjacent container well unit of a multi-unit car including such an intermediate unit.




The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages 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.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a side elevational view of a multi-unit railroad freight car which includes one preferred embodiment of the invention.





FIG. 2

a top plan view of a portion of the multi-unit railroad freight car shown in FIG.


1


.





FIG. 3

is a side elevational view of a portion of the car shown in

FIG. 1

, including a container-supporting intermediate unit together with portions of adjacent container well units.





FIG. 4

is a side elevational view of the underframe of the container-supporting intermediate unit shown in

FIG. 3

, separate from the adjacent well units and shared trucks.




FIG


5


is an isometric view of the underframe of the container-carrying intermediate unit shown in

FIGS. 3 and 4

.





FIG. 6

is a sectional view taken along line


6





6


of FIG.


4


.





FIG. 7

is a side elevational view of a multi-unit railroad/freight car which is another embodiment of the present invention.





FIG. 8

is a top plan view of a portion of the multi-unit railroad freight car shown in FIG.


7


.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




Referring now to the drawings which form a part of the disclosure herein, a multi-unit railroad freight car


14


embodying the present invention is shown in FIG.


1


. The freight car


14


includes five car units, of which a first container well unit


16


is at one end, a second container well unit


18


is at the opposite end, and a third container well unit


20


is in the middle of the 5-unit car. Two shorter container-supporting intermediate units


22


and


24


, similar to each other, are located between the container well units. There is an ordinary automatic coupler


26


at each end of the 5-unit car


14


for use in coupling the multi-unit car


14


to other cars of a train.




A respective truck


28


, for example, a 70-ton truck, is located at each end of the car


14


, supporting the outer ends of the two end well units


16


and


18


. Shared trucks


30


and


32


, for example, 100-ton trucks, support the rest of the multi-unit car.




As shown in

FIGS. 2 and 3

, each well unit


16


,


18


, or


20


may, for example, be generally similar to the well car units disclosed in Hill U.S. Pat. No. 4,599,949, but preferably without end bulkheads, and is capable of carrying a pair of 20-foot intermodal cargo containers


34


or a single 40-foot container


36


in its well


38


, with a 40-foot container


36


stacked on top of the container


36


or containers


34


carried in the well


38


.




Each of the container-supporting intermediate units


22


and


24


is located between two adjacent ones of the well units


16


,


18


, and


20


, and each end


40


or


42


of each intermediate unit is supported by a respective shared truck


30


or


32


. Each of the intermediate units


22


and


24


supports an intermodal cargo container


44


at a location higher than that for each of the containers


34


or


36


held within the well


38


of one of the well units


16


,


18


or


20


. Each end


43


or


45


of the container


44


is located above a portion of the end structure of the adjacent well unit. The container


44


, as shown, is a nominal 20-foot container, but the intermediate units


22


and


24


could be constructed to carry containers of other lengths instead, if desired.




Each container-supporting intermediate unit


22


and


24


includes an underframe including longitudinal and transverse structural members for supporting cargo and train loads and receiving couplers to connect the intermediate unit to the adjacent well units. The underframe has structural members attached thereto for supporting a container high enough to extend above an end structure such as a body bolster of an adjacent well unit.




As shown in

FIGS. 2

,


3


,


4


, and


5


, in the multi-unit car


14


each of the container-carrying intermediate units


22


and


24


is in the form of a spine unit, although other structural arrangements might be utilized instead. As the intermediate units


22


and


24


are similar, only the intermediate unit


22


will be referred to, together with the adjacent well units


16


and


20


, for the sake of simplicity, and it will be understood that the intermediate unit


24


is of similar construction and is similarly related to the respective adjacent well units


20


and


18


.




A longitudinally extending horizontal center sill


46


of the intermediate unit


22


is equipped at its first end


40


with a female portion


48


of an articulated coupling


50


which connects the container-carrying intermediate unit


22


to the adjacent well unit


16


, as shown best in

FIGS. 2 and 3

, with the coupling supported on the center bearing


52


of the shared truck


30


. At the second end


42


of the center sill


46


is a male portion


54


of a similar articulated coupling


56


. The male portion


54


of the coupling


56


is-interconnected with and supported on the female portion


48


of the coupling


56


, which is mounted on the adjacent body bolster


58


of the container well unit


20


to which the end


42


of the intermediate unit


22


is coupled. The articulated coupling


56


is supported on the center bearing


60


of the shared truck


32


.




Correspondingly, a male portion


54


of the articulated coupling


50


is mounted on the body bolster


62


of the container well unit


16


, to which the end


40


of the intermediate unit


22


is coupled.




One suitable articulated coupling


50


or


56


, as shown herein, is of the type utilizing a center bearing having a vertical axis of rotation with respect to the respective shared truck and including a female portion


48


having an upwardly open pair of hook-like members, while the other, or male, portion


54


of the coupling includes a transverse horizontal pin


64


extending through a captured ball. One such coupling is available from Cardwell Westinghouse Co., of Chicago, Ill. In such a coupling a pair of locking wedges (not shown) are attached to the female coupling portion


48


and rest against flat sides


66


of the horizontal connecting pin


64


to keep the coupling portions


48


and


54


engaged with each other.




Located atop and welded to the center sill


46


, adjacent its ends, are respective horizontal transverse bolsters


68


and


70


. Heavy steel gusset plates


71


and


73


help to interconnect each transverse bolster


68


,


70


to the top of the center sill


46


.




Attached to and extending longitudinally outward from each transverse bolster


68


,


70


are a respective pair of container support arms


72


that extend beyond the respective ends of the center sill


46


. The container support arms


72


are tapered in height, and each of them extends slopingly upward and away from the respective transverse bolster


68


or


70


. An outer end portion


74


of each of the container support arms


72


extends above and is spaced upwardly apart from the body bolster


58


or


62


of the adjacent well unit


20


or


16


, with sufficient clearance


76


to accommodate normal relative movement between the intermediate unit


22


or


24


and the adjacent well units


16


,


18


and


20


during operation of the car


14


in a train.




Respective twist-lock container-fastening hold-down devices


78


are mounted on the outer ends of the container support arms


72


at locations corresponding with the standard placement of container structures defining lifting and stacking apertures to retain and provide direct support for a cargo container


44


carried by the intermediate unit


22


.




A container floor safety support assembly


80


extends longitudinally above the center sill


46


of the intermediate unit so as to be a small distance beneath a container


44


carried on the container-supporting intermediate unit


22


. As shown in

FIGS. 2

,


3


,


4


and


5


, the container floor safety support assembly


80


includes as its main member an I-beam


82


, one end


84


of which is securely fastened, as by welding, to the top of the transverse bolster


70


. A pair of flanged, tapered, upright supports


86


extend upwardly from the top of the center sill


46


to support the I-beam


82


at respective locations spaced apart from the transverse bolster


70


, while the opposite end


88


of the I-beam extends beyond the farther one of the supports


86


, but is not attached to the transverse bolster


68


. This enables the container floor safety support assembly to accommodate flexing of the container-carrying intermediate unit


22


during operation of a train including the multi-unit car


14


disclosed herein.




By supporting the container


44


atop the container support arms


72


extending above the body bolsters


58


and


62


of the adjacent well units


20


and


16


, the container-supporting intermediate unit


22


disclosed herein places the ends


43


and


45


of the container


44


closer longitudinally to a container


34


or


36


or stacked containers carried in the adjacent well units


16


and


20


than is possible in conventional multi-unit container-carrying well cars. The length of the gap


89


between longitudinally adjacent containers may thereby be made as small as about 2 feet, and a smaller aerodynamic drag is produced, accordingly, than by containers carried on conventional container-carrying well car units interconnected with each other by either a drawbar or a shared truck.




Attached to each of the transverse bolsters


68


and


70


of the intermediate unit


22


are a pair of side bearing support arms


90


spaced apart from each other and arranged to rest on side bearings mounted on the shared truck


30


or


32


, in a conventional arrangement as shown in

FIG. 2

, to control lateral rocking of the intermediate unit


22


with respect to the shared trucks


30


and


32


. Since each container well unit


16


,


18


and


20


also has side bearings to limit its movement with respect to each truck


30


or


32


, this side bearing arrangement of the intermediate unit


22


also limits the ability of the intermediate unit


22


to roll laterally with respect to the body bolster


58


or


62


of the adjacent well unit carried on the same shared truck


30


or


32


. The container support arms


72


are thus prevented from coming into contact with the body bolsters


58


and


62


and interfering with relative movement of the intermediate unit


22


and the adjacent well units.




The multi-unit freight car


14


may be constructed as shown with a length of about 192 feet and a cargo capacity of 624,800 pounds in eight 20-foot-containers and three 40-foot containers, for a cargo capacity of about 32,60 pounds of cargo for each foot of car length.




Referring now also to

FIGS. 5 and 6

, in the container-supporting intermediate unit


22


, the center sill


46


may be a weldment of steel plates in a box beam arrangement reinforced by the articulating coupler portions


48


and


54


at the ends. Suitable internal webs or diaphragms


92


may be located, for example, as shown in broken line in

FIG. 4

to provide additional support where equipment such as brake gear (not shown) is attached. Preferably, top and bottom plates


94


,


96


and side plates


98


may be of material such as steel plate ⅝ inch thick.




Similarly, the transverse body bolsters


68


and


70


are preferably also weldments of steel plate, with horizontal top and bottom plates


100


,


102


, each ½ inch thick, for example, and with vertical side plates


104


which may be of somewhat lighter material. Support is provided by diaphragms


106


at each end of each bolster, as well as by other diaphragms


108


in locations aligned with the container support arms


72


, the side plates


98


of the center sill


46


, and with the side bearing support arms


90


, as shown in FIG.


6


.




The container support arms


72


are also preferably of a modified box beam construction of suitable welded steel plates, and are tapered toward their outer ends


74


from a greatest height adjacent the respective transverse bolster


68


or


70


. A top plate


110


is of greater thickness than a bottom plate


112


and side plates


114


of each container support arm


72


, and each container support arm


72


preferably also includes a reinforcing web


116


located, for example, as shown in broken line in FIG.


4


. The outer end portion


74


of each container support arm


72


, spaced farthest away from the respective transverse bolster


68


or


70


, may preferably be formed as a casting


118


welded to the modified box beam structure just described, to provide a rigid foundation for the twist lock container hold-down devices


78


mentioned previously.




Referring to

FIGS. 7 and 8

, a multi-unit railway freight car


120


is generally similar to the freight car


14


shown in

FIGS. 1 and 2

. The car


120


, however, includes three similar container well units


122


,


124


, and


126


, of somewhat different construction from the well units


16


,


18


and


20


, with body bolsters


58


′ and


62


′ at respective ends of well unit bodies defining respective container wells


131


that are capable of receiving intermodal cargo containers of greater lengths, such as 53-foot containers


127


or 48-foot containers


129


, as well as 40-foot containers


36


or pairs of 20-foot containers


34


. Other, preferably 53-foot, containers


130


and


132


can be stacked atop the containers


127


,


129


or


34


carried in the wells


131


in various configurations, as shown in

FIG. 7

, while containers


44


are carried on the intermediate units


22


and


24


coupled to the well units


122


,


124


and


126


.





FIG. 8

shows in top plan view a portion of the structure of the well units


122


and


126


of the freight car


120


, each of which may be generally similar to the container well units shown in Hill et al, U.S. Pat. No. 4,893,567. The multi-unit freight car


120


shown in

FIGS. 7 and 8

, despite the greater weight of the well units


122


,


124


and


126


, and the longer containers that can be carried thereon, includes end trucks


28


that may be of 70 ton capacity, and its shared trucks


30


and


32


may be of 100 ton capacity, when the intermediate units


22


and


24


are built to carry containers


44


of standard 20-foot size. Such a multi-unit car


120


can be built to have an overall length of about


231


feet over the pulling faces of the end couplers


26


and with a spacing of about 24 feet between 53-foot containers carried in the well units, leaving a longitudinal gap


128


of about 2 feet between each end


43


or


45


of the container


44


and a 53-foot container


130


or


132


carried in an adjacent-well unit. The multi-unit car


120


can then carry a container cargo of eight 20-foot containers


34


and


44


, two 53-foot containers


130


loaded to 56,700 pounds in the upper tier of the end well units


122


and


124


, and a third 53-foot container


132


loaded to 67,200 pounds in the upper tier of the center well unit


126


, giving a cargo capacity of 603,000 pounds, or about 2,610 pounds of cargo for each foot of car length.




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.



Claims
  • 1. A multi-unit railroad freight car, comprising:(a) at least two container well units, each defining a container well and each including a pair of body bolsters; (b) a plurality of trucks, a respective one of said trucks supporting each said body bolster of each of said container well units; (c) an intermediate unit located between two of said container well units, said intermediate unit having a pair of opposite ends, each of said opposite ends of said intermediate unit being coupled to a respective one of said container well units and being carried on a respective shared one of said trucks together with one of said body bolsters of said respective one of said container well units; and (d) a container support structure included in said intermediate unit, a portion of said container support structure extending above and being spaced upwardly apart from one of said body bolsters of one of said container well units.
  • 2. The multi-unit railroad freight car of claim 1 wherein said intermediate unit includes a center sill having a pair of opposite sill ends and including an articulating coupler associated with each of said opposite sill ends.
  • 3. The multi-unit railroad freight car of claim 1 wherein said intermediate unit includes a center sill having a pair of opposite sill ends and a pair of transverse bolsters, each of said transverse bolsters being attached to said center sill adjacent a respective one of said opposite sill ends.
  • 4. The multi-unit freight car of claim 3, said container support structure including a side bearing support arm mounted on one of said transverse bolsters and aligned with a corresponding side bearing foundation located on said respective shared one of said trucks.
  • 5. The multi-unit railroad freight car of claim 3, said intermediate unit including a container floor support member extending longitudinally above and being spaced upwardly apart from said center sill.
  • 6. The multi-unit railroad freight car of claim 5 wherein said container floor support member is attached to only one of said transverse bolsters and extends toward the other of said bolsters, but is free to move with respect to said other one of said transverse bolsters.
  • 7. The multi-unit railroad freight car of claim 6 including an upright support interconnecting said center sill with said container floor support member.
  • 8. The multi-unit railroad freight car of claim 1 wherein said container support structure of said intermediate unit includes a respective pair of container support arms associated structurally with each of said opposite ends of said intermediate unit, each of said container support arms including a portion thereof located above one of said body bolsters of a respective one of said container well units.
  • 9. The multi- unit railroad freight car of claim 8 including a respective container fastening device mounted on an outer end of each of said container support arms.
  • 10. The multi- unit railroad freight car of claim 9 wherein each of said container support arms is of welded construction and includes an end casting, said respective container fastening device being mounted on said end casting.
  • 11. A container-supporting intermediate unit for a multi-unit railroad freight car, comprising:(a) a center sill having a pair of opposite sill ends; (b) a pair of transverse bolsters interconnected with said center sill; (c) a pair of container support arms mounted on and extending longitudinally outward from each bolster and beyond a nearer one of said opposite sill ends; and (d) an articulated coupling located on one of said opposite sill ends of said center sill and adapted to interconnect said intermediate unit with another car unit atop a shared truck of said multi-unit freight car.
  • 12. The intermediate unit of claim 11 wherein said transverse bolsters are mounted atop said center sill adjacent said opposite sill ends thereof.
  • 13. The intermediate unit of claim 11 wherein each of said container support arms has an outer end located higher than said transverse bolster.
  • 14. The intermediate unit of claim 11 wherein said outer ends of said support arms are located with respect to each other in positions corresponding to those of the lifting and stacking apertures of standard intermodal cargo container.
  • 15. The intermediate unit of claim 11 including a pair of side bearing support arms on each of said transverse bolsters.
  • 16. A container-supporting intermediate unit for a multi-unit railroad freight car, comprising an underframe structure having longitudinal and transverse structural support members defining a pair of opposite ends of said underframe structure, an articulated coupling associated with one of said opposite ends of said longitudinal structural support member, and a container-supporting member extending longitudinally away from each of said opposite ends of said underframe structure.
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