The invention relates to a device for removing obstacles from a travel path of a vehicle, comprising clearing blades aligned in the form of a wedge with respect to each other, each having a wedge tip end facing the other clearing blade and a free end facing away from the wedge tip end, fastening means for fastening the device to the vehicle, and means for reducing a pileup generated by the clearing blades.
The invention also relates to a rail vehicle having a chassis, a vehicle body which is supported on the chassis and has side walls and a device for removing obstacles from a travel path, which is fixedly connected to the rail vehicle by way of two clearing blades aligned in the form of a wedge with respect to each other, each having a wedge tip end facing the other clearing blade and a free end facing away from the wedge tip end.
Such a device and such a rail vehicle are already known from WO 2010/124925 A1. The locomotive shown there has a snow clearer with two clearing blades aligned in the form of a wedge, said clearing blades being installed at the front of the locomotive. A pressure fluctuation is generated at the vehicle tip particularly when travelling at high speed, this is generally known as a pileup. In order to reduce this pressure fluctuation, the clearing blades of the afore-cited snow clearer are not embodied over the entire surface, but are instead provided with passages, in which guide vanes are arranged, with the help of which the air flowing through the passages is deflected downwards.
A further travel path clearer is known from EP 2 003 250 A2, which likewise has clearing blades arranged in the form of a wedge. The clearing blades have an end facing the shared wedge tip and a free end facing away herefrom, at which the respective clearing blade is extended by means of scraper webs. The scraper webs delimit orifices in order to reduce the air resistance.
The object of the invention is to provide a device and a rail vehicle of the type cited in the introduction, with which the pressure fluctuations at the vehicle tip can be reduced without having to provide the clearing blades with passages, apertures, or the like.
The invention achieves this object on the basis of the device cited in the introduction in that the means for reducing the pileup have at least one vertical guide plate, which is arranged in the region of the free end of a clearing blade so that an air stream generated by the clearing blade flows past the vertical guide plate.
The invention achieves this object on the basis of the vehicle cited in the introduction by means of at least one vertical guide plate, which is arranged in the region of the free end of the clearing blade and has a surface section which extends at right angles to the travel path.
In accordance with the invention means are provided to reduce the pileup, said means having a vertical guide plate. The vertical guide plate is arranged in the vicinity of the free end of a clearing blade, so that the air displaced laterally by the clearing blades flows past the vertical guide plate. Two vertical guide plates are provided for instance with two clearing blades. The vertical guide plates are embodied as wing-type smoke deflector devices, so that the air masses displaced laterally by the wedge-shaped clearing blades generate a smaller aerodynamic separation region compared with the device without guide plates. The maximum pressure fluctuations of the pileup are reduced in this way. The vertical guide plate is advantageously arranged laterally, in other words in the transverse direction, offset from the free end of the respectively assigned clearing blade. It thus ensures that the air stream generated by the respective clearing blade interacts with the vertical guide plate.
The vertical guide plate has at least one section with a surface which is aligned vertically or in other words at right angles to a horizontal plane. The horizontal plane is the surface of the travel path for instance, if this is likewise flat and free of hills or suchlike. The vertical surface of the vertical guide plate generates a smaller aerodynamic separation region. The manner in which the vertical guide plate is arranged offset in the transverse direction or in other words laterally to the free end of the respective clearing blade is basically arbitrary within the scope of the invention.
The term “aligned in the form of a wedge with respect to each other” is to be understood within the scope of the invention to mean that the two clearing blades form a wedge with a wedge tip, wherein the clearing blades either make contact with the wedge tip or the wedge tip is embodied as a point of intersection of its intended extensions. In other words, the clearing blades do not need to mutually contact one another, but can instead be arranged at a distance from one another at their ends which face one another. The clearing blades generally however touch one another with their wedge tip end and physically form a wedge tip. With respect to the wedge tip, the clearing blades span an acute angle. The clearing blades are expediently concavely arched here, as is typical in practice.
Each clearing blade is advantageously embodied over the entire surface and is free of inner orifices. Provision is thus made within the scope of the invention for a V-shaped arrangement of clearing blades, wherein if need be the clearing blades have recesses on their outer upper and lower edges, but are otherwise free of openings. The provision of inner orifices, as proposed within the prior art, has therefore become superfluous within the scope of the invention. This has an advantageous effect on the clearing behavior of the inventive device. Within the scope of the invention, the clearing blades can extend entirely across the travel path in the transverse direction so that these generate a planar air resistance. Limiting or reducing the pileup takes place solely by means of the vertical guide plate or the vertical guide plates.
According to a preferred further development of the invention, each vertical guide plate has a surface section, which is aligned in parallel with a plane, in which the wedge tip and the bisecting line of the angle are disposed, which in a top view of clearing blades is spanned in respect of the wedge tip. The said plane thus extends from the wedge tip symmetrically through the wedge arrangement of the clearing blades, wherein it extends in a vertical direction in respect of a horizontal travel path. The vertical guide plate advantageously comprises a surface section, which is arranged in parallel to this plane. In the assembled state, the said surface section would thus be aligned in parallel to the side wall of the rail vehicle.
Moreover, it is expedient if the means for reducing the pileup have at least one horizontal guide plate, with which a vertical guide plate is fastened to the respective clearing blade. The horizontal guide plate or guide plates serve however substantially to fasten the vertical guide plate to the respective clearing blade. Within the scope of the invention, the aerodynamic effect is almost exclusively provided by the vertical guide plate or guide plates.
A number of vertical guide plates are advantageously provided. Within the scope of the invention, each clearing blade can be equipped with a vertical guide plate. Moreover, it is however also possible for two, three or even more vertical guide plates to be provided on a clearing blade.
The vertical guide plate advantageously has an inflow side facing the wedge tip, which is arched toward the respective clearing blade. The air resistance is reduced even further in this way.
Moreover, it is also possible for each vertical guide plate to have an inflow side facing the wedge tip, which is aligned obliquely in respect of a horizontal plane, in other words upwards or downwards. This embodiment or configuration of the vertical guide plate can also produce aerodynamic advantages.
Further expedient embodiments and advantages of the invention form the subject matter of the description of exemplary embodiments of the invention below with reference to the figures in the drawing, wherein the same reference characters relate to components which act the same and wherein
The clearing blades 3 and 4 extend both in the direction of travel, which is referred to here below as longitudinal direction, and also in the transverse direction, wherein the device 1, which is connected to the locomotive 2 by a fastening device 21, extends in the transverse direction almost across the entire width of the locomotive 2 and thus across almost the entire width of the guideway. A vertical direction, in which in practice the height is plotted, extends at right angles to this longitudinal and transverse direction which runs in parallel to the travel path, which is also referred to here as horizontal plane. In the region of the free ends 7 and 8 of each clearing blade 3 or 4, a vertical guide plate 12 or 13 is arranged in each case as a means for reducing the pileup. Each vertical guide plate 12 or 13 is connected to the respectively assigned clearing blade 3 or 4 by way of a horizontal guide plate 14 or 15. Each vertical guide plate 12, 13 here has a section with a surface 16, which extends in the vertical direction, in other words at right angles upwards in respect of the horizontal. Here the intended longitudinal axes of the surfaces 16 and 17 can have a point of intersection with one another like the clearing blades, as indicated in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/070228 | 9/27/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/043661 | 4/2/2015 | WO | A |
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3468042 | Coy | Sep 1969 | A |
4274212 | Kurkela | Jun 1981 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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2160492 | Jun 1973 | DE |
2003250 | Dec 2008 | EP |
2010124925 | Apr 2010 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160222615 A1 | Aug 2016 | US |