[go: up one dir, main page]

US774897A - Block-signal system for electric railroads. - Google Patents

Block-signal system for electric railroads. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US774897A
US774897A US18402203A US1903184022A US774897A US 774897 A US774897 A US 774897A US 18402203 A US18402203 A US 18402203A US 1903184022 A US1903184022 A US 1903184022A US 774897 A US774897 A US 774897A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
circuit
block
car
signal
contact
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US18402203A
Inventor
Howell W Souder
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
W D ZEHNER
Original Assignee
W D ZEHNER
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by W D ZEHNER filed Critical W D ZEHNER
Priority to US18402203A priority Critical patent/US774897A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US774897A publication Critical patent/US774897A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61LGUIDING RAILWAY TRAFFIC; ENSURING THE SAFETY OF RAILWAY TRAFFIC
    • B61L21/00Station blocking between signal boxes in one yard

Definitions

  • My invention relates to electric block-signal systems in general; and it more specifically consists of a simple and cheap block system designed to be used on electric trolley-roads and embodying as one of its elements a safety device for disabling the power-circuit whenever a car enters a block already occupied by another car.
  • 1 represents the railroad-track, which also serves as a ground connection for the electric circuits, with the exception of the insulated rail-sections 1 1", one located near each end of the block, which are insulated from the ground and from the rest of the track for a purpose hereinafter to be explained.
  • ' 2 represents a trolley-wire, 3 the feed-com ductor. and A a return-conductor, where a metallic return-circuit is employed.
  • 5 and 6 represent cars going in opposite directions, as indicated by the arrows, car 5 having passed a little way into the east end of the block and car 6 being about to enter the west end of the same block.
  • 7 represents a normally open contact device located at the east end of the block and adapted to be closed upon the passage of a car into the block, as by contact with the trolley-wheel 9 of such car.
  • 8 is a similar contact device located at the west end of the block, and 10 represents the trolley-wheel of the car 6 about to strike said contact device 8 and close the circuit.
  • w 11 represents a rotary circuit-controller at the east end of the block, and 12 a similar rotary circuit-controller at the west end of the block.
  • the circuit-controller 11 has a series of circumferentiallyseparated contact-sections 11 11, which are eonductively connected by the conductor 11 or equivalent means and which are evenly distributed about the circumference of the circuit-controller, the angular distance between any two adjacent contact-sections 11 being constant and uniform.
  • the circuit-controller 12 is provided with contact-sections 12 and a conductor 12*, connecting the same together.
  • the circuit-controller 11 is mounted on a rotating shaft provided with a ratchet-wheel 13 and the controller 12 on a similar shaft provided with a ratchet-wheel 1A. These ratchetwheels are operated by the pawls 15 and 16, which are respectively controlled by the magnets 17 and 18 in the circuits 19 and 20, which extend from the contact devices 7 and 8 to the ground.
  • the signal-conductor or work-conductor 31 extends along each block and includes a series of signal devices of any convenient form, such as incandescent electric lamps 32 32, &c.
  • This signal-conductor has a stationary terminal 21 at the east end of the block and a similar terminal 22 at the west end of the block, which are in the arcs of travel of the circumferential contact-pieces on the respective circuitcontrollers and so proportioned as to always have one of said contact-sections bearing on it at each position of the circuit-controller during its step-by-step rotation by the pawland-ratchet mechanism before described.
  • a feed connection 27 extends from the feedwire 3 and has a stationary terminal 23 in the arc of travel of the contact-sections ll of the circuit-controller 11; but this contact or terminal 23 is so proportioned that one of said contact-sections 11 will bear on it only at every other position of the circuit-controller in the course of its step-by-step rotation by the pawland-ratchct mechanism.
  • the feed connection 28 and contact piece or terminal 21, similarly arranged, are provided for the circuit-controller 12.
  • a ground connection 29 has the stationary terminal 25 similarly located with reference to the controller 11, and the ground connection 30 has the contact-terminal 26 similarly located with reference to the controller 12.
  • the contacts 23 and 25 are so located that when one of the rotating contactpieces 11 bears upon one of these stationary contact-pieces no contact-piece bears upon the other. The same is true with reference to the contacts 21 and 26 and the rotating contacts 12.
  • the insulated contact-section 1 is connected with the return-conductor 4 by means of the circuit 33, and the insulated rail-section 1 is similarly connected by means of the circuit 3&.
  • Each of these circuits has a break, as at .33 and 3 1.
  • the break 33 may be closed by the circuit-controlling device 35, and the break 34: is similarly controlled by the circuitbreaker or circuit-controlling device 36 when the circuit-breakers arein the positions shown in full lines; but the circuits are opened when the circuit-breakers fall into the positions indicated in dotted lines.
  • the circuit-closers are normally pulled up into the position to bridge their respective breaks by the magnets 37 and 38, which are included in the signal or work circuit 31.
  • These circuit-controllers are also controlled by the second set of magnets 39 and 40, which are respectively included in the circuits 33 and 3 1.
  • Cords 11 and 12 serve as manually-operated means for resetting the circuit-breakers.
  • I employ the insulated rail-sections 1 and 1 and the lIO circuit connections therefor above described. It is evident that whenever there is current in the signal-conductor 31 the magnets 37 and 38 will be energized and the circuit-breakers and 36 held up in the full-line positions, thereby closing the breaks 33 and 34 in the return connections for these insulated tracksections, and consequently the circuit through the car-motors will, be complete and the cars may run in the usual manner.
  • the magnets 39 and 40 also have the additional function of preventing the second car entering the block from disabling the first car should the same happen to be on its insulated track-section at the moment of such entry of the second car. It is evident that if car 5 were on the insulated track-section 1.
  • the advantages of the invention comprise its simplicity and economy, a very cheap form of circuit-controller and a small amount of Wiring being necessary, its sure and automatic actlon under all conditions of servlce, and the absolute factor of safety introduced by the power-disabling apparatus called into opera-' tion whenthe signals are disobeyed.
  • circuit-controllers and their operating-magnets and cooperating contacts have been shown diagrammatically, and various different mechanical embodiments of the principle involved could be used in actual practice.
  • the constant-current connection between the signal-wire and both circuit-controllers might be secured by other means than through the same circumferentially-separated contact-sections which cooperate with the feed and ground connections.
  • Other forms of mechanism for rotating the circuit-controllers might be substituted.
  • the form of circuit-breaker cooperating with the insulated track-sections might be varied and the electromagnetic apparatus for operating the same changed so long as the hereinbefore-described result was secured.
  • the retu rn-circuit from the insulated track-section to the power-house might not be by way of a special return-wire 4:, as indicated, but could be carried around theinsulated rail-joints to the power-house in any other well-known manner.
  • the signal system herein described might be used without the insulated-rail-section attachment and, conversely, that said insulated-rail-section attachment might be used on other signaling systems; but the same is most perfectly designed to cooperate with the system herein described, as the same being intended for cheap constructions the necessity for positive safety devices in connection therewith is increased. All of these and other modifications of the apparatus herein described I should consider matters of mere mechanical and electrical skill and as being still within the boundaries of my invention.
  • an electric block-signal system the combination of a signal-conductor extending along the block, signals operated by the current carried thereby, a feed connection at each end of the block, a ground connection at each end of the block, a rotating circuit-controller near each end of the block, provided with circumferentially-separated contact-sections conductively connected and evenly distributed about its circumference, a stationary terminal near each end of the block for the signal-conductor, on which terminal at least one of the circuit-controllers contacts always bears at any period of the controllers rotation, terminals for the feed and ground connections so located that when a controller-contact bears on either, the other is disconnected, and means operated by a car entering or leaving the block for rotating the circuit-controller nearest that end of the block, half the angular distance between two contact-points.
  • a block-signal system for electric trolley-roads the combination of a block provided with an insulated section of track near each end, a circuit connection for each such section, a circuit-breaker in each circuit connection, a magnet controlling said circuitbreaker, a signal -circuit in which the magnets for any one block are included, currentsupply connections for the signal-circuit and means whereby a car entering the block while another car is already in that block will cut off the current supplied to the signal-circuit and deenergize the magnets.
  • a block-signal system for electric trolley-roads the combination of a series of blocks each provided with an insulated section of track near each end of each block, a returncircuit connection for each section, a normally open circuit-breaker in each returncircuit connection, a magnet controlling each circuit-breaker, a signal-circuit in which the magnets for any one block are included, current-supply connections for the signal-circuits at each end of each block, and signalcircuit-controlling apparatus which sends a current through the signal-circuit while one car is in a block, but cuts off said current when a second car enters the block.
  • a block-signal system for electric railroads the combination of a block provided with electrically-operated signals, an insulated section of track near one of said signals, a power-circuit connection for each such section, a circuit-breaker in said circuit connection, a magnet controlling said circuit-breaker, a circuit in which the electrically-operated signal device and the said magnet are included, current-supply connections for this circuit and circuit-controllers therefor operated by the passing cars.
  • a block-signal system for electric trolley-roads the combination of a block provided with an insulated section of track near each end, a circuit connection for each such section, a circuit-breaker in each circuit connection, a magnet controlling said circuit-breaker, a signal-circuit in which the magnets for any one block are included, current-supply connections for the signal circuit and means whereby a car entering the block while another car is already in that block will cut off the current supplied to the signal-circuit and deenergize the magnets, together with a second magnet in each circuit connection for an insulated track-section, said magnet also controlling the operation of the circuit-breaker.
  • a block-signal system for electric trolley-roads the combination of a block provided with an insulated section of track near each end, a circuit connection for each such section, a circuit-breaker in each circuit connection, a magnet controlling said circuit-breaker, a signal-circuit in which the magnets for any one block are included, current-supply connections for the signal circuit and means whereby a car entering the block while another car is already in that block will cut off the current supplied to the signal-circuit and deenergize the magnets, together with a second magnet in each circuit connection for an insulated track-section, said magnet also controlling the operation of the circuit-breaker, permanently-connected with the signal-conand manually-operated means for closing said circuit-breaker.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Train Traffic Observation, Control, And Security (AREA)

Description

No. 774,897. PATENTED NOV. 15, 1904. H. W. SOUDER.
BLOCK-SIGNAL SYSTEM FOR ELECTRIC RAILROADS.
APPLICATION FILED D110. 7, 1903.
no MODEL. 2 SHEETS-SHEET 1. 7
7 'Q N h Qwi ['11 0m anum v a. R 11444 Swot/Mu a E No. 774,897; PATENTED NOV. 15, 1904.
H. W. SOUDBR.
BLOCK SIGNAL SYSTEM FOR ELECTRIC RAILROADS.
APPLICATION FILED DEC. 1, 1903.
N0 MODEL. 2 SHEETS-SHEET 2.
Q\ (Q. I
QVi-lmwaca j m-ucwi oz Patented November 15, 1904.
- UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
HOWVELL W. SOUDER, OF TAMAQUA, PENNSYLVANIA, ASSIGNOR OF ONE- HALF TO W. D. ZEHNER, OF LANSFORD, PENNSYLVANIA.
BLOCK-SIGNAL SYSTEM FOR ELECTRIC RAILROADS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 774,897, dated November 15, 1904.
Application filed December '7, 1903. Serial No. 184,022. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, HOWELL W. So DriR, a citizen of .the United States of America, and a resident of Tamaqua, county of Schuylkill, State of Pennsylvania, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Block-Signal Systems for Electric Railroads, of which the following is a specification.
My invention relates to electric block-signal systems in general; and it more specifically consists of a simple and cheap block system designed to be used on electric trolley-roads and embodying as one of its elements a safety device for disabling the power-circuit whenever a car enters a block already occupied by another car.
One arrangement of circuits embodying my at the other end of the block, the two figures of drawings taken together representing one complete block of a road equipped with my system.
Throughout the drawings like referencefigures indicate like parts.
1 represents the railroad-track, which also serves as a ground connection for the electric circuits, with the exception of the insulated rail-sections 1 1", one located near each end of the block, which are insulated from the ground and from the rest of the track for a purpose hereinafter to be explained. y
' 2 represents a trolley-wire, 3 the feed-com ductor. and A a return-conductor, where a metallic return-circuit is employed.
5 and 6 represent cars going in opposite directions, as indicated by the arrows, car 5 having passed a little way into the east end of the block and car 6 being about to enter the west end of the same block.
7 represents a normally open contact device located at the east end of the block and adapted to be closed upon the passage of a car into the block, as by contact with the trolley-wheel 9 of such car. 8 is a similar contact device located at the west end of the block, and 10 represents the trolley-wheel of the car 6 about to strike said contact device 8 and close the circuit.
w 11 represents a rotary circuit-controller at the east end of the block, and 12 a similar rotary circuit-controller at the west end of the block. The circuit-controller 11 has a series of circumferentiallyseparated contact-sections 11 11, which are eonductively connected by the conductor 11 or equivalent means and which are evenly distributed about the circumference of the circuit-controller, the angular distance between any two adjacent contact-sections 11 being constant and uniform. In the same way the circuit-controller 12 is provided with contact-sections 12 and a conductor 12*, connecting the same together. The circuit-controller 11 is mounted on a rotating shaft provided with a ratchet-wheel 13 and the controller 12 on a similar shaft provided with a ratchet-wheel 1A. These ratchetwheels are operated by the pawls 15 and 16, which are respectively controlled by the magnets 17 and 18 in the circuits 19 and 20, which extend from the contact devices 7 and 8 to the ground.
The signal-conductor or work-conductor 31 extends along each block and includes a series of signal devices of any convenient form, such as incandescent electric lamps 32 32, &c. This signal-conductor has a stationary terminal 21 at the east end of the block and a similar terminal 22 at the west end of the block, which are in the arcs of travel of the circumferential contact-pieces on the respective circuitcontrollers and so proportioned as to always have one of said contact-sections bearing on it at each position of the circuit-controller during its step-by-step rotation by the pawland-ratchet mechanism before described.
A feed connection 27 extends from the feedwire 3 and has a stationary terminal 23 in the arc of travel of the contact-sections ll of the circuit-controller 11; but this contact or terminal 23 is so proportioned that one of said contact-sections 11 will bear on it only at every other position of the circuit-controller in the course of its step-by-step rotation by the pawland-ratchct mechanism. The feed connection 28 and contact piece or terminal 21, similarly arranged, are provided for the circuit-controller 12. A ground connection 29 has the stationary terminal 25 similarly located with reference to the controller 11, and the ground connection 30 has the contact-terminal 26 similarly located with reference to the controller 12. The contacts 23 and 25 are so located that when one of the rotating contactpieces 11 bears upon one of these stationary contact-pieces no contact-piece bears upon the other. The same is true with reference to the contacts 21 and 26 and the rotating contacts 12.
The insulated contact-section 1 is connected with the return-conductor 4 by means of the circuit 33, and the insulated rail-section 1 is similarly connected by means of the circuit 3&. Each of these circuits has a break, as at .33 and 3 1. The break 33 may be closed by the circuit-controlling device 35, and the break 34: is similarly controlled by the circuitbreaker or circuit-controlling device 36 when the circuit-breakers arein the positions shown in full lines; but the circuits are opened when the circuit-breakers fall into the positions indicated in dotted lines. The circuit-closers are normally pulled up into the position to bridge their respective breaks by the magnets 37 and 38, which are included in the signal or work circuit 31. These circuit-controllers are also controlled by the second set of magnets 39 and 40, which are respectively included in the circuits 33 and 3 1. Cords 11 and 12 serve as manually-operated means for resetting the circuit-breakers.
The operation of my invention is as follows: Normally when any given block is empty the two circuit- controllers 11 and 12 are so set that the signal-circuit 31 is connected at both ends either to the feed-wire 3 or to the ground that is to say, the circuit-controller 11 is either in the position shown in dotted lines and the circuit-controller 12 in the position shown in full lines or the reverse, the result being that no current passes through the signal-circuit 31 in either case. Assuming that the circuit-controller 11 is in the position shown in dotted lines and the circuitcontroller 12 in the position shown in full lines, if now a car enters one end of the block, as the east end, its trolley-wheel 9 will close the contact 7, as indicated at 9, energize the magnet 17 and actuate the pawl 15. This will rotate the circuit-controller 11 one tooth. There being twice as many ratchet-teeth on the ratchet-wheel as there are contact-sections 11, this will move the contact-sections 11 through a distance equal to half the angular distance between them, and one of the said contact-sections will be moved on to the feed-terminal 23, and the contact-section formerly resting on the groundterminal 25, will be moved off the same; As one of the radial contact-sections is still left on the work-circuit terminal 21, this will establish a current from the feed-Wire 3 through the wire 27, contact 23, radial contacts 11, and conductor 11 to signal-Wire contact21, through the signal-wire 31, to contact 22, through the radial contacts 12, conductor 12 ground-contact 26, and wire 30 to the ground. This will light all the incandescent lamps 32 and afford the information to the motorman of another car approaching the block that said block is occupied. When the car reaches the west end of the block, as it passes out it operates the circuit-controller 12 by rotating it one tooth of the ratchet, thereby shifting the radial contacts out of engagement with the ground-contact 26 and into engagement with the feed-contact 24:, thereby looping the signal-conductor into shunt with the feedconductor 3 and shutting off the current from the lamps 32. The unlighted lamps will convey the information to the motorman of any car now approaching the block that the same is open, and if said car approachesfrom the west, as indicated by the car 6, its trolleywheel 10 will close the contact-maker 8, energize the magnet 18, operate the pawl 16,
move the circuit-controller one tooth farther,
so that another radial contact bears on the ground connection 26, thereby reestablishing .thecircuit from the wire 27 through the signal conductor 31 and the wire 30 to the ground and again causing the lamps to glow. On passing out of the east end of the block the same car will energize the magnet 17, rotate the circuit-controller 11 one tooth, throwing the contacts 11 out of connection with the feed-contact 23 and into connection with the groundcontact 25, thereby looping the signal-conductor 31 into shunt with the ground and extinguishing the lamps. It is evident that if after the car 5 has entered the block and moved the circuit-controller 11 into the position shown in full lines the car 6 also enters the block from the opposite direction it will throw the circuit-controller 12 into the dotted-line position, and both grounds being out out the lamps 32 will all be extinguished, thus advising the motorman of car 5 that car 6 has overrun its signals, causing him to proceed with caution under control or to stop his car until the lamps are relighted, according to instructions issued. If car 6 backsout of the block, it turns the circuitcontroller 12 another tooth and reestablishes the connections which existed before it entered the block and again causes the lamps to glow, affording the information to the motorman of car 5 that the block has been cleared. As an additional safety device and a means for absolutely preventing the second car from passing beyond a short distance into the block when the same is already occupied I employ the insulated rail-sections 1 and 1 and the lIO circuit connections therefor above described. It is evident that whenever there is current in the signal-conductor 31 the magnets 37 and 38 will be energized and the circuit-breakers and 36 held up in the full-line positions, thereby closing the breaks 33 and 34 in the return connections for these insulated tracksections, and consequently the circuit through the car-motors will, be complete and the cars may run in the usual manner. If, however, after one car, as 5, has entered the'block another car, as 6, enters said block, it will, as previously described, shut off the current from the signal or work conductor 31 and deenergize the magnets 37 and 38. This will cause the circuit- breakers 35 and 36 to drop into the dotted-line positions,unless they are otherwise held up, and will open the return- circuits 33 and 34 for the insulated track-sections 1 and 1. Consequently when car 6 runs onto the insulated section l current will be cut ofl from its motor, and it will stop. This will absolutely prevent the second car from continuing on into the unoccupied block. The motorman of car 6, however, by pulling the cord 42 can reset the circuit-controller 36, and
upon reestablishing the'circuit 34 the magnet will become energized and hold such cirwit-controller in position, so that the car 6 will have the necessary power to back out of the block, when the normal conditions will be reestablished. The magnets 39 and 40 also have the additional function of preventing the second car entering the block from disabling the first car should the same happen to be on its insulated track-section at the moment of such entry of the second car. It is evident that if car 5 were on the insulated track-section 1.
While the operation of the system has been described for cars entering the block from opposite directions, it is evident that it would work in the same way for cars entering the block successively from the same end, so that the system is a closed block system, permitting only one car to enter the block at one time from either direction.
The advantages of the invention comprise its simplicity and economy, a very cheap form of circuit-controller and a small amount of Wiring being necessary, its sure and automatic actlon under all conditions of servlce, and the absolute factor of safety introduced by the power-disabling apparatus called into opera-' tion whenthe signals are disobeyed.
It IS evldent, of course, that various changes could be made in the details of construction illustrated without departing from the spirit and scope of my invention. The circuit-controllers and their operating-magnets and cooperating contacts have been shown diagrammatically, and various different mechanical embodiments of the principle involved could be used in actual practice. The constant-current connection between the signal-wire and both circuit-controllers might be secured by other means than through the same circumferentially-separated contact-sections which cooperate with the feed and ground connections. Other forms of mechanism for rotating the circuit-controllers might be substituted. The form of circuit-breaker cooperating with the insulated track-sections might be varied and the electromagnetic apparatus for operating the same changed so long as the hereinbefore-described result was secured. The retu rn-circuit from the insulated track-section to the power-house might not be by way of a special return-wire 4:, as indicated, but could be carried around theinsulated rail-joints to the power-house in any other well-known manner. It is also evident that the signal system herein described might be used without the insulated-rail-section attachment and, conversely, that said insulated-rail-section attachment might be used on other signaling systems; but the same is most perfectly designed to cooperate with the system herein described, as the same being intended for cheap constructions the necessity for positive safety devices in connection therewith is increased. All of these and other modifications of the apparatus herein described I should consider matters of mere mechanical and electrical skill and as being still within the boundaries of my invention.
Having therefore described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to protect by Letters Patent, is
1. In an electric block-signal system the combination of a signal-conductor extending along the block, signals operated by the current carried thereby, a feed connection at each end of the block, a ground connection at each end of the block, a rotating circuit-controller near each end of the block, provided with circumferentially-separated contact-sections conductively connected and evenly distributed about its circumference, a stationary terminal near each end of the block for the signal-conductor, on which terminal at least one of the circuit-controllers contacts always bears at any period of the controllers rotation, terminals for the feed and ground connections so located that when a controller-contact bears on either, the other is disconnected, and means operated by a car entering or leaving the block for rotating the circuit-controller nearest that end of the block, half the angular distance between two contact-points.
2. In an electric block-signal system the combination of a signal-conductor extending along the block, signals operated by the current carried thereby, a feed connection at each end of the block, a ground connection at each end of the block, a rotating circuit-controller near each end of the block, provided with circumferentially-separated contact-sectionsconductively connected and evenly distributed about its circumference, a stationary terminal near each end of the block for the signal-conductor, on which terminal at least one of the circuit-controllers contacts always bears at any period of the control'lers rotation, terminals for the feed and ground connections so located that when a controller-contact bears on either, the other is disconnected, and means operated by a car entering or leaving the block for rotating the circuit-controller nearest that end of the block, half the angular distance between two contact-points, said lastmentioned means comprising an electromagnet and circuit-controlling means for the same.
3. As an element in an electric signaling system, the combination of a rotating circuit-controller divided into a series of circumferentially-separated contact-sections, the angular distances between the centers of any two adjacent contactsections being uniform throughout, and means giving the controller a step-by-step rotary movement always in one direction, each step being equal to onehalf the angular distance between the centers of two adjacent contactsections, together with a work-circuit terminal, a feed-connection ter minal and a ground-connection terminal, all arranged in the path of rotation of the controller-contacts.
4. As an element in an electric signaling system, the combination of a rotating circuit-controller divided into a series of circumferentially-separated contact-sections, the angular distances between the centers of any two adjacent contact sections being uniform throughout, and means giving the controller a step-by-step rotary movement always in one direction, each step being equal to onehalf the angular distance between the centers of two adjacent contact sections, together with a work-circuit terminal, a feed-connection terminal and a ground-connection terminal, all arranged in the path of rotation of the controller-contacts, the feed and ground terminals being so disposed that only one of them can touch a controller-contact at any one time, and the work-circuit terminal being so disposed that it always touches at least one of the controller-contacts.
5. In a block-signal system for electric trolley-roads, the combination of a block provided with an insulated section of track near each end, a circuit connection for each such section, a circuit-breaker in each circuit connection, a magnet controlling said circuitbreaker, a signal -circuit in which the magnets for any one block are included, currentsupply connections for the signal-circuit and means whereby a car entering the block while another car is already in that block will cut off the current supplied to the signal-circuit and deenergize the magnets.
65. In a block-signal system for electric trolley-roads, the combination of a series of blocks each provided with an insulated section of track near each end of each block, a returncircuit connection for each section, a normally open circuit-breaker in each returncircuit connection, a magnet controlling each circuit-breaker, a signal-circuit in which the magnets for any one block are included, current-supply connections for the signal-circuits at each end of each block, and signalcircuit-controlling apparatus which sends a current through the signal-circuit while one car is in a block, but cuts off said current when a second car enters the block.
7 In a block-signal system for electric railroads, the combination of a block provided with electrically-operated signals, an insulated section of track near one of said signals, a power-circuit connection for each such section, a circuit-breaker in said circuit connection,a magnet controlling said circuit-breaker, a circuit in which the electrically-operated signal device and the said magnet are included, current-supply connections for this circuit and circuit-controllers therefor operated by the passing cars.
8. In a block-signal system for electric trolley-roads, the combination of a block provided with an insulated section of track near each end, a circuit connection for each such section, a circuit-breaker in each circuit connection, a magnet controlling said circuit-breaker, a signal-circuit in which the magnets for any one block are included, current-supply connections for the signal circuit and means whereby a car entering the block while another car is already in that block will cut off the current supplied to the signal-circuit and deenergize the magnets, together with a second magnet in each circuit connection for an insulated track-section, said magnet also controlling the operation of the circuit-breaker.
9. In a block-signal system for electric trolley-roads, the combination of a block provided with an insulated section of track near each end, a circuit connection for each such section, a circuit-breaker in each circuit connection, a magnet controlling said circuit-breaker, a signal-circuit in which the magnets for any one block are included, current-supply connections for the signal circuit and means whereby a car entering the block while another car is already in that block will cut off the current supplied to the signal-circuit and deenergize the magnets, together with a second magnet in each circuit connection for an insulated track-section, said magnet also controlling the operation of the circuit-breaker, permanently-connected with the signal-conand manually-operated means for closing said circuit-breaker.
10. In an electric block-signal system, the combination of a signal-conductor extending along the block, signals operated by the cureent carried thereby,- a feed connection having a terminal near each end of the signalconductor, a ground connection having a terminal near each end of the signal-conductor, a circuit-controller near each end of the block ductor, and alternately connected With the feed-terminal and the ground-terminal, and
means operated by a car entering or leaving 5 the block to alternate said connections.
Signed at Lansford, Pennsylvania, this 10th day of November, 1903.
HOWELL W. SOUDER.
Witnesses:
HUGH EDGAR, G. R. LEONARD.
US18402203A 1903-12-07 1903-12-07 Block-signal system for electric railroads. Expired - Lifetime US774897A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US18402203A US774897A (en) 1903-12-07 1903-12-07 Block-signal system for electric railroads.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US18402203A US774897A (en) 1903-12-07 1903-12-07 Block-signal system for electric railroads.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US774897A true US774897A (en) 1904-11-15

Family

ID=2843382

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US18402203A Expired - Lifetime US774897A (en) 1903-12-07 1903-12-07 Block-signal system for electric railroads.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US774897A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US774897A (en) Block-signal system for electric railroads.
US800179A (en) Electric signaling system.
US735416A (en) Electric signaling apparatus.
US773040A (en) Block-signal system.
US643609A (en) Signaling system.
US773166A (en) Electric signal system.
US441031A (en) Island
US595344A (en) russell
US735417A (en) Electric signaling apparatus.
US543596A (en) Electrical railway signaling system
US841607A (en) Railway signaling mechanism.
US2618741A (en) Time element relay control means
US795314A (en) Signaling system.
US763921A (en) Electrically-controlled automatic block system for operating railway-signals.
US748450A (en) Block-signal system.
US1211083A (en) Electric signal system.
US818515A (en) Electric signal system.
US600278A (en) Automatic switch for railways
US727147A (en) Automatic operating mechanism for electric-railway switches.
US736050A (en) Electrical signaling system.
US1196013A (en) Carl p
US716178A (en) Railway signaling system.
US1366107A (en) Railway signaling system
US707639A (en) Electrical safety alarm and signal mechanism for railways.
US755140A (en) Electric railway-signal.