The present invention relates generally to methods and apparatus for frictional braking of a vehicle or other heavy machinery. In particular, the present invention relates to novel railway wheel configuration that provides integrated brake drum dedicated to railway vehicle frictional braking.
Railway wheels mounted to freight car serves as not only a mechanical supporting component guiding rail car along the rail, but also a brake drum generating sufficient brake torque to stop the train and dissipating rapidly brake heat for safe train operation.
It has been recognized that railway wheels suffer from various types of wheel thermal damages due to brake heat produced in the tread and internal stresses of expansion (tensile) and contraction (compressive) developed in the wheel due to the brake heat, the wheel thermal damages including,
Recent studies also suggested that under heavier braking, brake heat, referring also as brake shoe thermal input, may accelerate the growth of shattered rim fracture, a phenomenon whereby rolling contact fatigue crack initiates at an internal defect in the wheel rim subsurface and propagates rapidly to cause a sudden substantial damage to the wheel.
Brake shoe thermal input also causes damaging hot axial deflection of wheel flange that could introduce large variations in rail/wheel flange clearances at elevated temperature and subsequent normal operation. Such variations could impair dynamic performance and safety of rail car under extreme service conditions.
Through predominately abrasive wear at high temperatures, wheel tread braking contributes to acceleration of uneven worn out of wheel tread and formation of hollow tread. The hollow tread can also induce high impact damages to wheel, rail, wheel set, rail car and lading and must be corrected by truing which shortens significantly normal wheel service life.
It can be easily noticed that the configuration of railway wheel of prior arts requires sharing of a single wheel tread surface by engaging-rail all the times and by engaging-brake-shoe during tread braking.
The direct brake shoe thermal input makes the wheel tread hottest region in the wheel while the rail/wheel rolling contacts or impacts make the same wheel tread highest stressed region in the wheel. Such overlap of high stress and high temperature and its combined effects make the wheel tread extremely vulnerable to the above-mentioned thermal wheel damages.
To obtain enough strength for reliable wheel performance, thick cross sectional wheel rim with heavy metal volume is provided in the prior arts, resulting in return, inefficient heat dissipation, rapid heat accumulation in wheel rim and rapid thermal stresses development in wheel rim/wheel plate, large hot axial deflection of wheel flange and large variation of wheel/rail clearances.
Despite all the above mentioned problems, wheel tread braking does offer a lot of advantages compared with alternative disc braking system and is widely used in various railway vehicles, the advantages including:
With present demands of increasing rail car load, increasing car running speed and improving operational reliability/efficiency, railway wheels are required to withstand more thermal and mechanical load without sacrificing its reliability and safety.
Accordingly, what is needed in the art are new wheel configurations that offer greater thermal tolerance to brake shoe thermal input, increased heat dissipation capacity, enhanced resistances to various types of thermal damages and reduced hot axial deflections.
The applicant's invention is a substantial departure from conventional railway wheels, and the applicant is not aware of any prior art having a similar railway wheel configuration similar to his.
One object of the present invention is to provide novel wheel configuration with integrated brake drum that remains substantially contact-free with rail and is dedicated to railway vehicle frictional braking. Such wheel configurations are invented aiming at increasing thermal tolerance and enhancing thermal damage resistances of the wheel, reducing hot axial deflection of the wheel flange and retarding formation of hollow wheel tread.
Another object of the present invention is to provide above-mentioned novel wheel configurations that permit easy wheel manufacture by conventional processes and easy wheel application to the existing railway vehicle requiring minimum modification to the vehicle components.
Another object of the present invention is to provide converted wheel tread braking means and the conversion methods for the existing rail car in order to accommodate the use of the novel wheels.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention can become more apparent to those skilled in the art as the nature of the invention is better understood from the accompanying drawings, as well as detailed descriptions.
Referring to
The wheel set assembly 140 comprises of a pair of wheels 110 and roller bearings 150 that are mounted on opposite ends of an axle 160. The tread brake system 130 comprises of a brake beam 133 activated by an air brake control system, a pair of brake shoe holders 132 mounted near opposite ends of the brake beam 133 and a pair of brake shoes 131 mounted to the brake shoe holders 132. The pair of brake shoe holder 132 is positioned on the brake beam in a way that assures proper brake shoe/wheel tread engagement during tread braking.
As best shown in
The outer periphery of the wheel rim 111 forms a wheel tread 113 that rolls on rail track all the times and is engaged with brake shoe 131 substantially radially during tread braking. The essentially cylindrical shaped inner periphery of the wheel hub 116 forms a wheel bore 118 that is created at the center of the wheel hub 116 for mounting to the axle 116. The wheel flanges 112 of the pair of wheels 110 mounted on the same axle 160 help guiding/steering the rail car truck 120 on rail track.
At any given time, the contact between tapered wheel tread 113 and crowned rail head is limited to a coin-size small area. However, under various rail track conditions, the rail/wheel contact points disperse over the entire wheel tread 113, with majority of them falling between center line of the tread and the flange 112. Meanwhile, the brake shoe 131 engages with almost full width of wheel tread 113 during tread braking and consequently the wheel tread 113 suffers from uneven worn out, more wear near flange 112, less wear near the edge 114, forming a hollow wheel tread.
It is known that the heated wheel rim 111 during tread braking tries to expand radially and is constrained by the colder wheel plate 115 and the even colder wheel hub 116, thereby creating strong internal tensile hoop stresses in the wheel rim 111 and wheel plate 115, generating strong bending stress in the joint area 117 and causing hot axial deflection of the wheel flange 112. The tensile hoop stress in the wheel plate 115 is resisted by the beneficial compressive residual stresses produced by the heat treatment during wheel manufacture. However, the residual stress reversal, either locally or generally, from beneficial compressive hoop stress to tensile hoop stress could occur in the wheel rim 111 under heavy tread braking, leading to catastrophic wheel failures.
Referring to
The outer surface 243 of the integrated brake drum 241 is tapered similarly to the wheel tread 213 that is favorable for both proper functioning and easy manufacturing of the novel wheel 210.
A stress relief groove 244 of a suitable geometry is created on the outer surface of the integrated brake drum at the transition intermediate the wheel rim 211 and the integrated brake drum 241. The inner surface 242 of the integrated brake drum 241 merges with the wheel back plate contour.
The wheel 210 can be manufactured by any suitable conventional manufacturing processes including but not limited to forging, casting, machining or any combinations of the above-mentioned processes. The brake drum 241 is formed integrally with the wheel 210 during the wheel manufacturing process. The stress relief groove 244 is created by either near net shape casting, hot/cold rolling or a successive conventional machining following the wheel casting or wheel forging.
The wheel 210 is also subjected to similar heat treatment, shot peening, non destructive testing (NDT), chemical and physical analysis and dimensional inspections as the wheels 110 do during the wheel manufacture. Consequently, similar level of compressive residual stresses are developed in the wheel rim 211 as well as in the integrated brake drum 241, which are beneficial for resisting wheel fatigue and thermal wheel failures.
The wheel 210 is made of any suitable material including but not limited to carbon steel, alloy steel, other metal alloys or metal composites.
The novel wheel 210 of the present invention can be used with most of the existing rail car components without any needs for modification. In particular, the novel wheel 210 permits the use of standard wheel tread braking means that is similar to the arrangement shown in
The addition of the integrated brake drum 241 avoids direct brake shoe thermal input into the wheel tread 213 and provides additional thermal masses in a relatively thin-walled geometry favorable for efficient air cooling. The altered wheel geometry combined with altered heat input location, lowers the local temperature of the wheel tread 213 and of the wheel rim 211, lowers the overall stress state in the wheel rim 211 as well as in the wheel plate 215 and limits the amount of hot axial deflection in the wheel flange 212. All these changes contribute to greater thermal tolerance of the wheel 210 to brake shoe thermal inputs and greater resistances to the wheel thermal damages when compared to the wheel 110 of the prior art.
The added integrated brake drum 241 in thin-wall geometry experiences significant hot deflection under heavy brake shoe thermal input. By contrast, the remaining wheel body including wheel rim 211 and wheel plate 215 suffers from lower thermal stresses and exhibits smaller hot axial deflection when compared to the wheel 110 of the prior art.
It should be noted that one two-section brake shoe or two brake shoes, one being engaged with the outer periphery 243 of the brake drum 241 and the other with the wheel tread 213, can be used with the wheel 210 for the purpose of minimizing hot axial deflection of the wheel flange 212.
Referring to
Instead of integrating a brake drum by the back side of the wheel rim as the wheel 210, the wheel 310 provides an integrated brake drum 341 by the front side of the wheel rim 311. The brake drum 341 has a similar thin-wall configuration as the brake drum 241 in the wheel 210. The outer peripheral surface 343 of the brake drum 341 is formed as a straight projection of the tapered wheel tread 313 while the inner surface 342 of the brake drum 341 takes a substantially cylindrical or slightly tapered shape. A stress relief groove 344 of a suitable geometry is created on the inner surface 342 of the brake drum 341 adjacent to the wheel rim 311.
The brake shoe 334 is positioned so that it can engage with a portion 314 of the wheel tread 313 and the peripheral surface 343 of the brake drum 341 at the same time. The portion 314 of the wheel tread 313, similar to the front edge 114 of the wheel 110, is subjected to less frequent heavy engagement with the rail, and experiences less rail-engaging wear than the rest of the wheel tread 313. The additional brake shoe/wheel tread engagement, however, promotes braking wear in the portion 314 of the wheel tread and makes the wheel tread 313 worn out evenly.
Therefore, apart from similar benefits on the wheel performance as the wheel 210, the wheel 310 does offer additional advantages such as retarding the formation of hollow wheel tread, and distancing brake shoe thermal input further away from the critical wheel flange 312.
The novel wheel 310 of the present invention permits use of existing standard rail truck components with minor modifications such as relocation of brake shoe holder on brake beam.
The wheel 310 is made of any suitable material including but not limited to carbon steel, alloy steel, other metal alloys or metal composites and is manufactured by any suitable conventional manufacturing methods such as forging, casting, machining or any suitable combination of the above.
Referring to
The ratio of brake shoe working surface between the brake shoe 434 and 435 is pre-determined and controlled so that the amounts of brake shoe thermal inputs into brake drum 441 and 451 will cause negligible hot axial deflection in the wheel flange 412. The divided brake shoe/brake drum arrangement also have enlarged effective heat dissipation surface resulting in improved air cooling performance when compared to single brake shoe arrangements such as the wheel 110, 210 or 310.
However, the novel wheel 410 does require additional brake shoe or special brake shoe set be made in order to accommodate the application of such novel wheel 410.
Other advantages of the present invention will become more fully apparent and understood with reference to the appended drawings and claims.