1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an improved rail cushion assembly for use as a supporting cushion between a railroad rail and a railroad tie, especially a concrete railroad tie. More particularly, the present invention relates to an improved rail cushion assembly that includes a resilient rail pad that is in contact with the bottom flange surface of the railroad rail, and an abrasion-resistant plate that is positioned between the rail pad and a concrete railroad tie. The abrasion-resistant plate serves to minimize abrasion by sand and debris of the upper surface of the concrete railroad tie and of the lower surface of the rail pad as a result of movement of trains along the rail, thereby lengthening the useful operating life of the rail pad assembly.
2. Description of the Related Art
Anti-abrasion arrangements of various configurations have been proposed in the past for minimizing abrasion of the surfaces of concrete railroad ties and of the resilient pads that are placed between the railroad tie and the steel rail. It has been shown that two-part assemblies, consisting of a resilient pad positioned on an abrasion-resistant lower plate, have offered some relief to the problem of concrete tie abrasion at positions directly beneath the rails. One example of such a two-part system is illustrated and described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,405,081, entitled “Anti-Abrasion Rail Seat System,” which issued on Apr. 11, 1995 to, John H. Bosshart.
The function of the abrasion plate in a two-part anti-abrasion system is to provide an abrasion-resistant, bearing-type surface between the resilient rail pad and the concrete tie surface. The resilient pad can then flex and shift along the surface of the abrasion plate, rather than flex and shift along the concrete tie surface, when it is subjected to the heavy and varying compressive loads that are imposed upon the rail pads by the weight of moving trains. Such heavy and varying compressive loading causes the resilient pad to be cyclically partially compressed vertically. And as a result of the vertical pressures applied to the pad, it is also spread or extended horizontally. Such horizontal spread of the pad material results in relative lateral movement between the resilient pad and the surface that it rests against. Without the presence of an intervening abrasion plate, the horizontal spreading of the pad, combined with the sand, grit, and debris generally present in such environments, provides the pad surface movement and resulting abrading action that causes the abrasion of the upper surface of the concrete tie, as well as of the abutting rail pad surface. As a result, the effective operating life of the rail pad and of the concrete tie is significantly reduced.
The presence of an abrasion plate that is positioned between the resilient rail pad and the concrete tie serves to prevent that periodic abrading action from taking place between the resilient rail pad lower surface and the upper surface of the concrete tie. Any relative rail pad movement or spreading resulting from pad flexing, or from any other applied load, is intended to take place between the resilient pad surface and the abrasion plate surface, and not between the resilient pad surface and the upper surface of the concrete tie. Testing has shown that concrete tie abrasion can be significantly diminished by positioning a highly wear resistant surface between the resilient rail pad and the upper surface of the concrete tie.
Experience has shown, however, that the same desirable bearing and abrasion resistance properties of currently utilized abrasion plate materials can also cause the abrasion plate to slide out from between the resilient rail pad and the tie, either longitudinally or laterally, when the combination is subjected to the cyclically-varying compressive loading described above. Thus, there is a need for improved resilient rail pad and abrasion plate designs and assemblies that permit the two components to be separately produced as physically independent parts, yet be effectively interconnected in such a way that the two components continue to work together as a system and to remain properly positioned on the tie, as well as relative to each other.
One proposal for an interconnected resilient rail pad and abrasion plate is disclosed in published patent application No. US 2004/0113133 A1, entitled “Abrasion Assembly for Supporting Railroad Ties,” which was published on Jun. 17, 2004, and which names William Hugo Geissele et al. as inventors. That publication discloses a rail pad that includes a number of surface depressions formed on its lower surface, and an injection molded, thermoplastic polymer abrasion plate that includes a number of correspondingly-positioned surface protrusions that are formed on its upper, rail-pad-facing surface. The depressions and protrusions interengage with each other when the resilient pad and the abrasion plate are placed in face-to-face contact with each other, so that the protrusions are received in the depressions, to prevent substantial relative sliding movement and lateral separation between the rail pad and the abrasion plate.
Additionally, as a further interconnection arrangement, the structure disclosed by Geissele et al. includes a resilient rail pad having a hole at each of the four corners. The rail pad holes receive correspondingly-positioned, upstanding, molded stalks or pins that are carried at the corners of the molded thermoplastic abrasion plate and that extend through the rail pad holes when the pad and plate are placed together. The tips of the stalks or pins are deformed by the application of heat to cause the tips to mushroom and thereby non-removably retain the pad and plate together. The result is a two-part, interconnected and interengaged pad and plate assembly that serves to limit relative movement of the pad and plate, but that also provides the constraints to limit excessive and problematic pad and plate separation that could lead to tie surface contact of the pad and possible pad abrasion and tie abrasion.
The interconnection arrangement disclosed in the above-identified Geissele et al. published application requires the use of an injection-moldable grade of polymeric material to provide the necessary protrusions and pins of the disclosed abrasion plate design. Consequently, the use of high performance, non-injection-moldable grades of materials is necessarily excluded. For example, if ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) were to be desired to be utilized as the abrasion plate material in the Geissele et al. arrangement, it would be disqualified because that material cannot be injection molded. That and other highly abrasion resistant, ultra high molecular weight materials typically exhibit zero melt flow when heated above their melt temperature, and therefore they can only be manufactured in flat profiles using high-pressure compression-molding processes. Complex, three-dimensional profiles of UHMW materials can only be achieved through costly, post-molding machining of thick sheets to provide the disclosed surface features, and thus such raw material options are economically foreclosed from consideration in designs such as the one proposed by Geissele et al. In addition to UHMW polyethylene, other high performance UHMW polymers (e.g., UHMW acetal or UHMW nylon) having superior abrasion-resistant performance properties would also be eliminated from consideration in the Geissele et al. arrangement.
Therefore, in order to utilize such superior, high-performance, longer-lasting materials as candidates in the manufacture of two-part rail pad assemblies, there is a need for a railroad pad assembly design that allows the use of a flat, two-dimensional abrasion plate. Such an assembly should also provide suitable constraints to keep the abrasion plate from shifting relative to the resilient pad by slipping out laterally when the assembly is exposed to the cyclic compressive loading normally encountered in a rail pad application. The present invention responds to that need.
Briefly stated, in accordance with one aspect of the present invention, an improved rail cushion assembly is provided for placement between a lower surface of a railroad rail and an upper surface of a railroad tie. The cushion assembly includes a resilient rail pad having a substantially flat upper surface adapted to face and to contact a railroad rail lower surface, and a substantially flat lower surface adapted to face a railroad tie upper surface. The rail pad includes a pair of railroad-tie-engaging, inclined opposite edges that extend from a pair of opposed end edge panels of the rail pad, and at least one slot is provided at each of the inclined edges of the rail pad; A flat, flexible abrasion plate is releaseably carried by the rail pad adjacent the lower surface of the rail pad. The abrasion plate includes at least one laterally-extending tab on each of two opposite edge surfaces. Each of the tabs is releaseably received in a respective slot of the rail pad to provide a unitary rail cushion assembly.
The structure, operation, and advantages of the present invention will become further apparent upon consideration of the following description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
In order to assure that the descriptions of direction or of orientation of components as described in this application are clear and unambiguous, a directional reference will first be established. In that regard, any and all references to direction, such as “longitudinal,” “lateral,” and “transverse,” will have as their reference point the longitudinal axis of the steel rail when it is positioned as shown in
Referring now to the drawings, and particularly to
A typical concrete railroad tie 12 is shown in a perspective view in
The railroad rails are supported on the respective end portions of the tie and are positioned between rail support members 14, 16 at a location hereby referred to as the rail seat. A cushion assembly 28 as shown in
Because of changing downward vertical forces imposed upon concrete tie 12 through rail 10 by the weight of moving trains, a rail cushion assembly 28 is provided between rail 10 and tie 12. Cushion assembly 28 is positioned between the flat, bottom surface 30 of base flange 18 to absorb the cyclically-varying compressive forces transmitted through rail 10 that would otherwise act directly against concrete tie 12 and would gradually cause wear of the portion of the upper surface of the concrete tie 12 that lies below rail base flange 18. Rail cushion assembly 28 includes a substantially flat, resilient rail pad 32 that is in surface-to-surface contact with bottom surface 30 of rail 10. Positioned below and in surface-to-surface contact with bottom surface 34 of rail pad 32, and also in surface-to-surface contact with the upper surface of concrete tie 12 is an abrasion plate 36.
An embodiment of rail pad 32 is shown in
Elongated recesses 42 and 44 are provided along the longitudinal edges of rail pad 32 to allow space for the positioning of the pad between insulators 24, 26 and between rail support members 14, 16 that are shown in
It should be noted that some small clearance is intentionally provided between the edges of the elongated recesses 42, 44 of the rail pad and the restraining components of the installed assembly. The clearance allows the rail pad to freely locate itself between insulators 20, 22 and support members 14, 16 when it is positioned between the rail and the tie. That clearance is necessary to account for the slightly differing positions of rail support members 14, 16 because of manufacturing tolerances, or because of possible different positions of rail seat centerlines of adjacent ties that need to accommodate a continuous steel rail.
Rail pad 32 includes a pair of end edge panels 46, 48 that extend from respective opposite longitudinal ends of the rail pad. End edge panels 46, 48 are each inclined relative to pad top surface 38 and to pad bottom surface 34, and they each slope in a downward direction relative to pad top surface 38, as best seen in
The inclined end edge panels of rail pad 32, when in contact with the corresponding chamfered edges 12d and 12e of the concrete tie 12, serve to restrain movement of the rail pad in the longitudinal direction of the rail. Inclined end edge panels 46, 48 thereby serve to maintain rail pad 32 in position on tie 12 by preventing pad movement that could otherwise be induced as a result of cyclically-varying forces that are applied to the pad as trains move long rail 10, or by forces imposed on the pad by the thermal expansion or contraction of the steel rail because of changing environmental conditions. In that regard, the disclosed design helps combat the longstanding problem of insufficient longitudinal restraint of the steel rail. Is is a strongly held belief that a major contributor to low longitudinal restraint of the steel rail was the poor longitudinal restraint of the underlying rail pad. By design, the disclosed assembly offers firm, positive, and reliable mechanical restraints to any imposed movement of the pad in the longitudinal direction of the rail, and arguably provides valued additional longitudinal restraint of the steel rail.
Rail pad top surface 38 can also include several parallel, laterally-extending surface depressions 52 for providing further resilience to train-imposed compressive forces, and also to reduce the amount of material that is needed to mold a rail pad. Other top surface depressions such as those shown in
Bottom surface 34 of rail pad 32 is shown in
As shown in
One form of abrasion plate is shown in a top plan view in
Connection tabs 62, 64 of abrasion plate 36 have a thickness that corresponds substantially to the height of slots 56, 58 of rail pad 32, with a minimal clearance, not to exceed about 0.005 inches. Connection tabs 62, 64 have a designed width that is slightly narrower that the widths of respective slots 56, 58 in pad 32. That clearance is required to facilitate assembly of abrasion plate 36 to rail pad 32, and to allow rail pad 32 and abrasion plate 36 to assume their proper relative positions upon installation on a concrete tie. The clearance also allows the rail pad to move laterally a limited distance over the contacting abrasion plate surface in response to rail traffic loads, without causing movement of the abrasion plate relative to the concrete tie. It is preferable for such limited relative movements to take place between the rail pad and the abrasion plate in order to avoid any sliding movement of the abrasion plate relative to the concrete tie upper surface, because it is such sliding movement that causes abrasion of the concrete tie upper surface.
Similar to recesses 42 and 44 of rail pad 32, recesses 61 and 63 are provided along the longitudinal edges of abrasion plate 36. The abrasion plate recesses allow space for the positioning of the plate between rail support members 14, 16 as shown in
In addition to restricting the movement of the abrasion plate, the disclosed embodiments also provide means to restrict any excessive and unwanted longitudinal movement of the abrasion plate when experiencing the cyclical loads during use of the assembly. By locating the abrasion plate beneath rail pad lower surface 34 and between inclined end edge panels 46, 48 of the rail pad, movement of the abrasion plate in the longitudinal direction is effectively limited. The allowable longitudinal movement of the abrasion plate is a function of the difference between the longitudinal length of the bottom surface of rail pad 32 that extends between the intersection of that bottom surface with inclined end edge panels 46, 48 and the distance between end edges 68, 70 of abrasion plate 36.
Another form of abrasion plate is shown in
Rail pad 86 of
The abrasion plates shown in
In response to the excessive surface abrasion that has been experienced heretofore when concrete ties are utilized in place of wooden ties, the rail industry has developed a means by which those abraded areas of the concrete tie below the rails can be reconditioned. Various filler materials are available that when applied to the worn surfaces of concrete ties replaces the concrete material that has been abraded away. One such material is manufactured by the Willamette Valley Company, of Eugene, Oreg., and is sold under the trade name CTR. Such filler materials can also serve as bonding agents and are typically either epoxy- or urethane-based. When first applied to the tie these filler materials are of semi-liquid or paste-like consistency, they have high adhesive qualities, and they become extremely hard when fully cured.
It is common practice when servicing a worn concrete tie to first remove rail clips, insulators, steel rail, and rail pad assemblies to fully expose the worn surface of the tie. Repair compound is then deposited on the tie surface at the abraded areas, followed immediately by the placement of new rail pad assemblies over the repair compound. Some vertical force on the rail pad assembly is then required to firmly press the filler material down into the worn or abraded surfaces of the tie and to cause the repair material to flow into all available cavities. Once the repair material is fully cured, the repair effort results in the restoration of a planar surface at the previously-abraded tie upper surface, as well as to return the rail cushion assembly to its original elevation.
When utilized in association with a concrete tie repair process such as that described above, in which other forms of rail pad assemblies had been utilized, the rail cushion assembly disclosed herein can provide a two-part rail pad assembly that serves as added protection to the underlying concrete tie and filler material. It does so by limiting relative movements at the tie upper surface that could cause the concrete surface to abrade away beneath the rail. That added protection can be provided by forming multiple holes through the thickness of the abrasion plate, as shown in
Abrasion plate 72 of
Rail pad 32 and abrasion plate 36, in their several geometrical variations as described above and as shown in the several drawing figures, can advantageously be connected together before shipment to a job site by means of the connection tab and slot arrangement disclosed herein. The assembly of an abrasion plate to a rail pad by inserting the abrasion pad connection tabs into the respective slots formed in the rail pad simplifies field installation of the rail cushion assembly by eliminating the shipping of separate components and an on-site assembly step.
The rail pads can be formed from a variety of materials that are suitable for providing flexible, long-lasting resilient pads. Suitable rail pad materials include specific grades of polyurethane, such as Elastollan®, available from BASF Corporation, of Florham Park, N.J. The abrasion plates can advantageously be formed from a tough, abrasion-resistant polymeric material, such as ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene sheets having a thickness of from about 0.040 to about 0.090 inches.
The rail cushion assembly disclosed herein provides a two-part rail pad assembly that serves to protect the underlying concrete tie. It does so by limiting movements at the tie upper surface that could cause the surface to abrade away beneath the rail. When utilized in association with a concrete tie repair process such as that described above, additional protection can be provided by the design by forming multiple holes through the thickness of the abrasion plate to allow for the flow and inclusion of the concrete tie repair material. Once fully cured, the repair material occupying the provided holes will act as a dowel pin to completely eliminate any possible lateral or longitudinal movement of the abrasion plate relative to the tie upper surface. By eliminating relative movement between the contacting abrasion plate and tie surfaces, abrasion of the tie surfaces can be avoided.
Although particular embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit of the present invention. For example, although shown as passing completely through end edge panels 48, 46, the slots in rail pad 32 need not extend through the end edge panels, but can instead extend only partially into the end edge panels, if desired. Accordingly, it is intended to encompass within the appended claims all such changes and modifications that fall with the scope of the present invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1045741 | Pinney | Nov 1912 | A |
2110894 | Stedman | Mar 1938 | A |
2996256 | Moses | Aug 1961 | A |
3945566 | Bush | Mar 1976 | A |
3957201 | Johnson et al. | May 1976 | A |
4047663 | Reynolds et al. | Sep 1977 | A |
4231908 | Pennino | Nov 1980 | A |
4316578 | Reynolds et al. | Feb 1982 | A |
4527736 | Ortwein | Jul 1985 | A |
4648554 | McQueen | Mar 1987 | A |
4757945 | Leeves | Jul 1988 | A |
4771944 | Brister et al. | Sep 1988 | A |
4899933 | Martin | Feb 1990 | A |
4925094 | Buekett | May 1990 | A |
5011077 | Hodgson et al. | Apr 1991 | A |
5110046 | Young | May 1992 | A |
5195679 | Leeves et al. | Mar 1993 | A |
5203502 | Young | Apr 1993 | A |
5261599 | Brown | Nov 1993 | A |
5335850 | Igwemezie | Aug 1994 | A |
5405081 | Bosshart | Apr 1995 | A |
5549245 | Kish | Aug 1996 | A |
5551632 | Kish et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
5551633 | Kish et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
5730357 | Besenschek et al. | Mar 1998 | A |
6045052 | Besenschek | Apr 2000 | A |
6386461 | Wildgoose | May 2002 | B1 |
6471139 | Bruder et al. | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6604690 | Young | Aug 2003 | B2 |
6619558 | Jang | Sep 2003 | B1 |
6761322 | Porrill et al. | Jul 2004 | B1 |
7080791 | Geissele et al. | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7152807 | Nevins | Dec 2006 | B2 |
20040113133 | Geissele et al. | Jun 2004 | A1 |
20040200906 | Young | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20060151626 | Geissele et al. | Jul 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070235551 A1 | Oct 2007 | US |