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A bogie is a wheeled wagon or trolley. In mechanics terms, a bogie is a chassis or framework carrying wheels, attached to a vehicle. It can be fixed in place, as on a cargo truck, mounted on a swivel, as on a train carriage or locomotive, or sprung as in the suspension of a caterpillar tracked vehicle.
Railway cars
The B1 Bogie The BR Mark 1 coach brought into production in 1950 utilised the B1 Bogie, which was rated to run at 90mph. The wheels were cast as a one-piece item in a pair with their axle. The simple design involved the bogie resting on four leaf springs (one spring per wheel) which in turn were connected to the axles. The leaf springs were designed to absorb any movement or resonance and to have a damping effect to benefit ride quality. Each spring was connected to the outermost edge of the axle by means of a roller bearing contained in oil filled axle box. The oil in these boxes had to be topped up at regular maintenance times to avoid the bearing running hot and from seizing. The Commonwealth Bogie The SKF or Timkin manufactured Commonwealth bogie was introduced in the late 50’s for all BR MK1 vehicles. The bogie was a heavy cast steel design weighing 6.75 ton with fitted sealed roller bearings on the axle ends, avoiding the need to maintain axle box oil levels. The leaf springs were replaced with coil type springs (one per wheel) running vertically rather than horizontally. The advanced design gave a superior ride quality to the B1, being rated for 100 mph. The side frame of the bogie was usually of bar construction, with simple horn guides attached, allowing the axleboxes vertical movements between them. The axleboxes had a cast steel equaliser beam or bar resting on them. The bar had two steel coil springs placed on it and the bogie frame rested on the springs. The effect was to allow the bar to act as a compensating lever between the two axles and to use both springs to soften shocks from either axle. The bogie had a conventional bolster suspension with swing links carrying a spring plank. The B4 Bogie The B4 bogie was introduced in 1963. It was a fabricated steel design as versus cast iron and was hence 1.55 tons lighter than the Commonwealth, weighing in at 5.2 tons. It also had a speed rating of 100 mph. Axle/spring connection was again with fitted roller bearings. However, now two coil springs rather than one were fitted per wheel. Only a very small amount of MK1 stock was fitted with the B4 bogie from new, it being used to on the MK1 only to replace worn out B1 bogies. The BR MK2 coach however carried the B4 bogies from new. Tram Bogies Tram bogies are much simpler in design because of lighter axle load, this and tighter curves that are found on tramways means that tram bogies almost never have more than two axles. Furthermore, some tramways also have steeper gradients and vertical as well as horizontal curves, which means that tram bogies often need to pivot on the horizontal axis as well. There are articulated trams with bogies under articulations, they are called Jacobs bogies. There are low floor trams without (pivoting) bogies and many tramway enthusiasts see them as "retrograde" steps. See also: Diesel multiple unit Tracked vehicles Some tanks and other tracked vehicles have bogies as external suspension components (see armoured fighting vehicle suspension). This type of bogie usually has two or more road wheels and some type of sprung suspension to smooth the ride across rough terrain. Bogie suspensions keep much of their components on the outside of the vehicle, saving internal space. Although vulnerable to antitank fire, they can often be repaired or replaced in the field. See also | ||||||||||
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