"Bottling the Air"
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Mon Oct 25 20:51:27 EDT 2010
Interesting discussion and I appreciate the responses. One more question: If
you let bleed the air out of train car, can you not move it unless you hook
it up to an air supply from a locomotive?
Mike Weeks
Brody School of Medicine
Greenville NC
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 5:20 PM, NW Mailing List
<nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>wrote:
> When I started working as a car inspector on SCL in 1971 at Collier, the
> yard foreman(Conductor) bled the cars off when he walked and put on the
> chalk marks indicating the track number that the cars were to be switched
> into.
>
> Walt Gay
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> *From:* NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
> *To:* NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
> *Sent:* Monday, October 25, 2010 1:57 PM
> *Subject:* Re: "Bottling the Air"
>
> Jim,
>
> The process of getting the cars bleed off, at least at Roanoke, has changed
> through the years. Thirty years ago (and before), N&W employed "air
> bleeders". These men's sole job consisted of bleeding the air off the trains
> after they arrived in the receiving yard. Either before, or after, the car
> department finished inspecting an inbound train, the air bleeders, as
> instructed by the yardmaster, would walk the entire train, bleeding the air
> off all the cars, except, leaving enough air and/or handbrakes to ensure the
> cars would not move.
>
> When a yard engine was coupled to a track to hump, the brakeman would then
> remove any remaining brakes (air or hand).
>
> At the present time, the bleedding of the cars is handled by the car
> department (car knockers, car monkeys, etc), who bleed the cars as they
> inspect the inbound trains. Train or yard crews still handle the brakes, as
> necessary.
>
> Jeff Sanders
>
> --- On *Mon, 10/25/10, NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>* wrote:
>
>
> From: NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
> Subject: Re: "Bottling the Air"
> To: "NW Mailing List" <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
> Date: Monday, October 25, 2010, 12:41 PM
>
> What was done at Bluefield was simply a variation of what they still do
> in "hump" yards (where retarders are used instead of riders). Which makes me
> wonder - how do they go about releasing the brakes on cars that are humped?
> I can see the men working the cut levers at the Radnor hump in Nashville,
> but I don't see them doing anything with the angle cocks. In Bluefield there
> were riders in proportion to the length of the cut to do the braking, and
> there was a big motor car which brought the riders back up to the scale
> house. Once in awhile, not enough riders would get on a cut, and there would
> be a big derailment when the cut got down to the cars already at the east
> end.
> As to the length of time to pump up an entire train, that is why N&W
> put the second air pump on the S1a's and retrofitted the S1's. I can
> remember a railroader saying that the first S1's assigned to Williamson took
> a long time to pump up the train. (they were accustomed to the two pumps on
> a Z1a) Shortly afterward, the 200 came out of Roanoke with two pumps. How
> C&O got by with one pump all those years is a mystery. They obviously had a
> different operating philosophy from N&W. Jim Nichols
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
> *To:* NW Mailing List <nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org>
> *Sent:* Mon, October 25, 2010 10:12:46 AM
> *Subject:* Re: "Bottling the Air"
>
> Gene
>
> Technically I would seriously doubt that.
>
> What was done on what you saw, and someone who actually was a
> brakeman/conductor like Jeff could confirm. In Bluefield yard, and other
> places, the cars were set out on tracks, and a certain number of cars had
> hand brakes tied down. That would depend on the size of the cut as to how
> many brakes were tied down. Once hand brakes were tied down, the switch
> engine would cut off, the air on the cut was dumped, causing an emergency
> application, but hand brakes had already been applied. Over time, the air
> system would leak off, depending on how long they had sat.
>
> Once the yard shifter came in and coupled on to the cut, and applied its
> independent brake (for the locomotive) to hold it all in place. The brake
> systems on the cars had probably sat long enough that most if not all the
> air had bleed off the system, but the brakemen would walk along the cut to
> the triple valve on each car, and bleed off the remaining air, to release
> all air brakes. The brakemen did not couple the air line, therefore the hand
> brakes were all that would hold the cut. The hand brakes would still be on,
> once the air had been bleed, the brakemen would go along and release the
> hand brakes, the switch engine would pull back out, with the cut, into the
> clear, then shove the cut towards where they were to be put, if they were
> sorting cars, one man would pull the cut lever between the cars, and a
> brakeman would ride the cut, if needed for controlling the speed with the
> hand brake, while the cars rolled down into its track and couple with the
> other cars in that track, the brakeman would tie down the hand brakes, and
> the go back and do it again with another cut, etc.
>
> Generally handing rolling cars, not coupled to a locomotive, was rarely
> done with air in the system. As Harry reported, air pumping can take some
> time to fill the entire train line. You used to see with the diesels,
> running at high RPMs while standing, the engineer, is running the diesel up
> to run the compressor faster, and pump air through the train quicker. A
> number of factors can determine how long it takes to pump a train,
> including, of course, train length, cold weather, how many leaks are in the
> system and how much initial terminal time that crew wants to report on their
> time sheet! I've heard of occasions where it would take several hours of
> pumping time to release all the brakes in a coal train.
>
> In my younger days, when I was riding my bicycle down to the track, I'd sit
> and watch, and see eastbound coal trains get stopped by the signal at VN
> before going into South Yard, once the signal cleared, it might take them
> 30-45 minutes to pump air before they moved, and that was in good weather.
> They were great days, and I wish I had the interest and time to do that
> today, but alas, I have neither today.
>
> Ken Miller
>
> On Oct 25, 2010, at 9:12 AM, NW Mailing List wrote:
>
> Ken;
>
> Bluefield had a natural grade in both the East and West yard with the
> high point being in the area of the Round House. I remember as a young
> fellow in the East End of Bluefield, watching the "yard shifters" sorting
> the cars. There would be a number of cars released to freely roll to an
> appointed switch to make up trains. The Yard brakeman with his brake stick
> would control the speed until making couple with the other cars. I remember
> watching the men try to time the coupling just right and jump up in the
> air so as to miss the coming jolt of the sudden stop. I assume that free
> roll had to be done by "bottling the air", which was a common practice even
> in the late 50's. Also I remember watching "road shifters" push cars up to a
> speed and then stopping the locomotive allowing the cars to run freely
> though a switch, either coming to a stop on their own, or making couple with
> other cars.
>
> Gene Arnold
>
>
> "Bottling the air" which I think, is now prohibited by most rule
> books, means to close the angle cock (air line) on both ends of the
> car or cut of cars before separating them from the train. That way,
> air stays in the system, and does not dump the air to emergency on
> that car or cut of cars. It is, among other things, made to speed up
> operations, as with air already in the train line of those cars, it
> means that the locomotive air compressor, does not have to run as long
> to pump air back into the system, which can be a considerable amount
> of time, meaning the crew can get underway sooner.
>
> If the air is dumped from the car or cars, it sets those brake systems
> into emergency, and to release those brakes, the air system has to be
> pumped up again from the locomotive. By bottling the air, it means
> that only hand brakes, or chocks may be holding the cut of cars in
> place, which can lead to a drift off, or runaway, or difficulty
> coupling if the brakes are not holding well.
>
> Ken Miller
>
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