Rail-mounted load-cell scales are intended for weighing railway cars wheel by wheel during motion (e.g., an uncoupled car, a coupled car in a rolling stock, and the rolling stock as a whole). Software of the scales performs a set of service functions: measuring speeds of all axles, wheel and axle loads, as well as generating some characteristics of car failure and car loading correctness. The software eventually identifies a weighed rolling stock car by car. The invention can be used at enterprises of different branches of industry, such as agriculture and transport. With respect to the service functions, the scales can be used as a means for monitoring the rolling stock.
There are known rail-mounted load-cell scales (type VD-30, company “Avitek-Plus”, www.avitec.ru), which comprise measuring rails mounted in a rail track cut-section and electronic equipment (a controller, a personal computer, communication cables) for weighing cars during motion and under static conditions. The controller is arranged near a rail track, while the computer is arranged at a distance up to 1 km. On top of that, the scales are equipped with a car-wheel position sensor (for a static weighing mode) and a temperature sensor (for compensating a temperature influence on measurement accuracy). A motion speed is not more than 40 km/h in case of weighing and is unlimited without weighing.
However, the measuring rail is ambiguously defined in the specification of the scales of this type as follows: “rail-mounted weight-measuring strain sensor”, “weighing load-cell rail”, “weight-measuring strain sensor made as a rail”, “weighing rail”, and finally “measuring rail”. Practically speaking, two measuring rails constitute a load receptor. In all these cases, the measuring rail is a specialized high-technology measuring device.
The measuring rails are equipped with strain sensors providing data about shearing forces in the rail serving as a multisupport beam to the electronic equipment. These sensors are arranged in the region of a rail neutral axis, approximately in the middle of a rail web. As a rule, an opening-concentrator is drilled in this region, which increases controllable strains by at least 4 times. There are 4 resistive-strain sensors adhered to the internal surface of the opening, with the resistive-strain sensors being arranged along the contour of the opening and interconnected in a full bridge. The whole group of the resistive-strain sensors is at 45° with respect to a vertical axis of symmetry, which allows it to measure (accurate to a coefficient) maximum shear strains (and eventually, the shearing force). Two sensors spaced form each other along the rail length at a distance of about 0.8 m constitute a measuring section (there is no cross sleeper under this section, since cross sleepers are arranged at a distance of more than 1 m). The difference of signals from the both sensors represents the wheel load on this section. The second rail is identical to the first one. The measuring rail has a minimum length of about 6 m and a maximum length of about 18 m. A number of measuring sections varies from 1 to 8 according to modifications of the scales. The six modifications of the scales provide accuracy classes 0.2, 0.5, 1 and 2 according to State Standard (GosStandart) 8.647-2015.
The drawbacks of the above-described scales are down to the following. It is possible to perform an additional machining operation on the rail and install the strain sensors thereon only under the conditions of complex manufacture. Making the cut-section of the road track and mounting the measuring rails in this cut-section require blocking the traffic for at least 4 hours. Finally, the last drawback is a deviation from the standard cross-sleeper arrangement, i.e. a twofold increase in the distance between the cross sleepers, which is highly undesirable in all case and totally unallowable in the absence of motion-speed constraints on the measuring section. Moreover, multimeter communication links between the analog strain sensors and the controller increase the risk of electrical interferences and significantly complexify the installation of the scales.
There are also known rail-mounted load-cell scales, which are described in application RU2008144076, dated May 11, 2008 and entitled “Rail-mounted load-cell scales”.
These scales comprise resistive-strain sensors which, contrary to the scales of type VD-30, are adhered to webs of working rails during its normal operation (without having to block the rolling-stock traffic). The sensors are encapsulated by means of a set of polymer and metal plates. Electronic equipment is arranged in the same manner as in the scales of type VD-30, namely: controllers are arranged to the outside of the rail track. This circumstance is an essential drawback of the scales for the following reasons: 8 communication cables between the sensors and the controllers fill the space between cross sleepers on a measuring section, thereby complexifying the installation of the scales and increasing the risk of electrical interferences.
The objective of the invention is to simplify the design and installation of scales and reduce the probability of electrical interferences in measuring circuits.
The technical result of the invention amounts to the arrangement of measuring equipment locally in the region of a measuring section of a rail.
The essence of the invention is that circuit boards of controllers are arranged on both rails under a rail base in recesses formed by a set of protective plates, as shown (see
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2018129553 | Aug 2018 | RU | national |
The present patent application is a Continuation-in-Part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/643,980 filed on Mar. 3, 2020, which is a National stage of the PCT application PCT/RU2019/000565 filed Aug. 9, 2019 which claims priority to Russian patent application RU 2018129553 filed Aug. 14, 2018, all of which incorporated herein by reference by their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16643980 | Mar 2020 | US |
Child | 17481356 | US |