Welcome to another #RailwaysExplained thread... this one is another port over from the Site We Don't Mention. More to come!
HOW IT WORKS - TROLLEY OVERHEAD LINE
Back in 2019 I visited Beamish Museum, and used what I learned there to write about Trolley #OLE for the #OLEbook 6th edition.
#railways #OLE #OCS #OverheadLine
This entry was edited (1 year ago)
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Electric Traction : Dover A. T. : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
Internet ArchiveGarry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •The system was popular for trams in the late 19th/early 20th century; but most have now converted to pantographs. It is still the only way that a trolley bus system can take power - there just isn't enough room for 2 pantographs side by side.
The key advantage of trolley wire is that the position of OLE no longer needs to be strictly controlled relative to vehicle. This has obvious advantages for unguided trolleybuses, but is also useful for early trams, which used a dense network of tracks.
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Removing the strict geometrical relationship between track and OLE meant more flexible wiring arrangements, with groups of wire runs clustered in the centre of tracks.
It is also much easier to mount a trolley pole on top of an open deck tram - the pole is insulated from adjacent passengers.
At the top of the trolley pole is a trolley head. Wooden trolley poles are provide with a traction cable running down the centre of the pole.
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •The collector head is usually the slipper type; this uses a carbon block that sits within a grooved carrier that pivots in both planes. The slipper collector provides quieter operation & less sparking than the older wheel wheel type.
Crucially, the system only works when the head is behind the vehicle as it relies on the vehicle’s motion, which is always trying to return the pole to its neutral axis. Attempts to drive the vehicle in opposite direction will result in the pole leaving the wire.
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •For this reason the reversing triangle was developed; this uses the natural resistance of the trolley pole to being pushed rather than pulled, to effect an automatic reversal.
You can see a video of that operation at youtube.com/watch?v=d021xWx0Y6…
Crich Tramway Museum Trolley Reversing Triangle
YouTubeGarry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •On straight sections of track, support is either by span wires, or (if road width & aesthetic restrictions permit) by using cantilevers. Where these are used, they are typically designed to be aesthetically sympathetic to their surroundings.
At curves & junctions there are more sophisticated span wire connections than on conventional OLE to achieve the required contact wire position; multiple span wires may be anchored at a single point & wire runs may have pull-offs connecting them together.
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Special arrangements are needed where wire runs diverge and converge, since the head must be actively guided onto the correct wire.
Unlike conventional OLE, the low tensions and speeds mean that it is practical to split one wire run into two; this is done using an assembly known as a frog, mirroring the terminology used in the track discipline.
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Frogs are paired with similar arrangements at track level. Tram systems often used spring-loaded turnouts, held by springs in the dominant direction. Any tram moving through these in the facing direction will follow the normal path.
Trams moving in the trailing direction can approach from the dominant leg, but also from the other direction, the rails moving temporarily into the correct route under the force of the wheel flanges.
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •For these turnouts a spring-loaded switch frog is provided; this works in exactly the same way, the flanges of the collector head doing the same job as the wheel flanges.
We literally have turnouts in the sky!
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Where trams may take either route in the facing direction, active measures are taken to switch the tongue to the correct route before a tram passes. Either the frog is manually switched, using a lever from ground level, or the switch can be automated in tandem with the track.
I've also seen references to trailing frogs with no moving parts - but I don't understand how they would work.
Anyone?
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •So the trolley system requires all of the switches and crossings that guided track systems do. The complexity of providing this in an aerially suspended system means that trolley poles often fall off the wire. Like this: youtube.com/watch?v=OfSDu-Vbh4…
Because these are LV low speed systems, it is possible to mount a gopro at the top of a trolley pole. This gives a fascinating insight into how these systems work & the dynamics of it. Check out youtube.com/watch?v=QHxMKWCm1d… and other similar videos.
SEPTA trolley pole comes off wire
YouTubeGarry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Sidenote: these images were so hard to get. Getting detail on the underside of a wire on a bright sunny day was like:
*adds a stop of overexposure*
still no detail
*add another stop*
still no detail
(repeat until they chuck you out because its closing time)
Please do post corrections and additions, I could do with some trolleyphiles to improve my understanding of this very weird - to me anyway - system.
Garry Keenor
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •As always, you can find out more about trolley systems and OLE by downloading my book from ocs4rail.com/downloads. Section 15 refers.
You can also buy the physical book here: thepwi.org/product/overhead-li…
Finally, you can read my other #RailwaysExplained threads here: mas.to/@25kV/11064472006939218…
/thread ends
Download the 6th Edition PDF – Overhead Line Electrification for Railways
ocs4rail.comAs always, you can find out more about trolley systems and OLE by downloading my book from ocs4rail.com/downloads. Section 15 refers.
You can also buy the physical book here: thepwi.org/product/overhead-li…
Finally, you can read my other #RailwaysExplained threads here: mas.to/@25kV/11064472006939218…
/thread ends
Garry Keenor
2023-07-02 13:27:24
Fixed Block
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •I had always been of the belief that the non moving part overhead frogs rely on the fact by the time the head of the trolley pole reaches the frog that the trolley pole base is in one of two very different locations based on which route is being taken, so the head is basically dragged thru the frog onto the correct wire. I found a pic of the type I know of: sydneytramwaymuseum.com.au/tra…
Until I read your thread I had no idea movable overhead frogs existed on tramways!
Garry Keenor reshared this.
Garry Keenor
in reply to Fixed Block • • •@fixedblock Thanks for the photo! as for my query: mas.to/@25kV/11088322532890437…
Garry Keenor
2023-08-13 16:22:25
Brian Danger Hicks
in reply to Garry Keenor • • •Garry Keenor
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in reply to Brian Danger Hicks • • •sb
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