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March 5, 1872: Westinghouse patents the air brake

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March 5, 1872: Westinghouse patents the air brake
Posted by zardoz on Wednesday, March 5, 2008 7:56 AM

1872: George Westinghouse Jr. receives patent No. 124,405 for the automatic railroad air brake.

Before the air brake, railroad engineers would stop trains by cutting power, braking their locomotives and using the whistle to signal their brakemen. The brakemen would turn the brakes in one car and jump to the next to set the brakes there, and then to the next, etc. The system was dangerous (brakemen died or were maimed), imprecise (the train might stop too soon or too late for the station) and unreliable (the train sometimes didn't stop before running into another train or anything else on the tracks). Railroad accidents were frequent and deadly.

Westinghouse's 1869 version, the straight or direct air brake, used air hoses to connect the cars. When the engineer turned on the brakes, air pressure turned the brakes on in each car of the train. Of course, if the hoses leaked or disconnected, the train lost braking power.

With air brake 2.0, Westinghouse turned things around. Air pressure kept the brakes off. The engineer reduced pressure to put the brakes on. This built-in safeguard meant a loss of pressure would stop the train automatically. That applied to leakage and to the situation where cars came unhitched: Loose cars would brake to a stop. The system went into use in 1872 on the Pennsylvania Railroad.

Automatic air brakes soon gained widespread adoption around the world. They made braking safer and more precise and allowed railroads to operate at higher speeds, now that trains could be reliably stopped. The brakes are used today not only on railroads, but for large trucks, buses and even amusement-park rides.

Westinghouse (1846-1914) was one of the great inventors of the 19th century. He also created life-saving electrical signals for railroads that kept two trains from occupying the same "block" of track, a rotary steam engine and devices for transporting natural gas. He bought Nikola Tesla's patents for alternating current, electrified hundreds of towns and demonstrated the superiority of AC over the direct current favored by Thomas Edison. And, of course, he founded the company that bears his name.

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, March 5, 2008 9:28 AM
 Commodore Vanderbilt wrote:

You propose to stop my trains with wind?

LarryWhistling
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, March 5, 2008 10:06 AM

Sadly, the company George Westinghouse founded no longer exists.

http://www.post-gazette.com/westinghouse/beginning.asp

The current corporate iteration, Westinghouse Electric Company, is owned by Toshiba and "provides fuel, services, technology, plant design, and equipment for the commercial nuclear electric power industry."

http://www.westinghousenuclear.com/index.shtm

The George Westinghouse Museum in Wilmerding has also closed, its collections and endowment acquired by the Historical Society of Western PA.

Dave

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Posted by Poppa_Zit on Wednesday, March 5, 2008 1:23 PM
 dsktc wrote:

Sadly, the company George Westinghouse founded no longer exists.

http://www.post-gazette.com/westinghouse/beginning.asp

The current corporate iteration, Westinghouse Electric Company, is owned by Toshiba and "provides fuel, services, technology, plant design, and equipment for the commercial nuclear electric power industry."

http://www.westinghousenuclear.com/index.shtm

The George Westinghouse Museum in Wilmerding has also closed, its collections and endowment acquired by the Historical Society of Western PA.

Dave

 

I used to work for the Westinghouse Broadcasting division (the "Group W") of Westinghouse Electric. It bought out and became today's CBS. Once a great company, Westinghouse pioneered TV and radio stations including the first commercial radio station in the U.S. -- KDKA in Pittsburgh.

George Westinghouse should be remembered as a genius in many arenas. He'd be equally famous as Thomas Edison if he'd self-promoted the way Edison did.

When Edison was trying to peddle to towns and industry his low-voltage direct current (DC) system -- which had the inherent attribute of not being able to move the current very far --Westinghouse Electric received the rights for the first patent for alternating-current (AC) transmission from Westinghouse's friend Nikola Tesla -- who greatly disliked Edison, mainly for innovative work he was never paid for.

Edison kept busy pushing the benefits of DC. In an attempt to discredit Tesla and Westinghouse, Edison went around the country electrocuting animals with AC.

Westinghouse Electric -- with Tesla's help -- built the first huge generating plant at Niagara Falls. Westinghouse Electric was the major competition for Edison's General Electric for decades and specialized in moving and delivering high voltage current long distances. Tesla had conceived the rotating magnetic field principle in 1882 and used it to invent the first brushless AC motor or induction motor in 1883.

Westinghouse supplied the power and lighting for the Chicago World Fair of 1893 (Columbian Exhibition) as well as some of the traction motors for the elevated electric rail shuttle trains that moved visitors around the fair.

He dedicated himself to making the nation's railroads safer and more efficient. He was only 19 years old when he debuted his first invention, the rotary steam engine. At age 21, he invented a "car replacer" -- the device to guide derailed railroad cars back onto the tracks. He also invented the reversible frog, the part of a railroad turnout (switch) to guide trains onto one of two tracks. Westinghouse also pursued many improvements in railroad signals (then using oil lamps) and in 1881 he founded the Union Switch and Signal Co. to manufacture his signaling and switching inventions.

The Westinghouse air brake:

 

"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. They are not entitled, however, to their own facts." No we can't. Charter Member J-CASS (Jaded Cynical Ascerbic Sarcastic Skeptics) Notary Sojac & Retired Foo Fighter "Where there's foo, there's fire."
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Posted by J. Edgar on Wednesday, March 5, 2008 4:04 PM

 

 kudos to you for reminding us all of this great man of Railroading......coupla notes...the series of test..there was 3...took place in 1886/7 on the Burlington........American RR's were in no hurry to adopt the automatic airbrake any more then they were willing to adopt  Major Janney's automatic coupler..there was 1 man named Lorenzo Coffin who spent his lifes savings and over 15 years fighting the railroads to adopt the coupler and brake...after the first unsuccessfull test Coffin convinced Westinghouse to attend the 2nd. ...this test too was unsastisfactory....but Mr. Westinghouse being on hand worked to make improvements to his invention...the Burlington agreed to another test and Coffin prevailed upon the Master Car-Builders Association to oversee the test this test was successfull...according to news reports in the Burlington IA paper...."an immense train was hurled down the steep grade into Burlington at 40 miles per hour.....and the train came to a standstill within 500 feet with nary a jar"...it was also reported that Coffin had tears in his eyes and said " I am the happiest man in all of Creation"....the Railroads were beat into submission by the Railroad Safety Appliance Act of 1893....President Harrison after signing the bill into law gave the pen he signed it with to Mr Coffin.....Coffin alone badgered harassed and generaly lobbied for this act for the 6 years after the tests and for about 10 before the tests....IMHO he deserves as much credit for the safety of todays RR's as do Westinghouse and Janney

 

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Posted by J. Edgar on Wednesday, March 5, 2008 7:35 PM
 zardoz wrote:

1872: George Westinghouse Jr. receives patent No. 124,405 for the automatic railroad air brake.

. The brakes are used today not only on railroads, but for large trucks, buses and even amusement-park rides.

the air brakes on trucks and buses are simular to railroad air brakes only in that they use air.....air systems on trucks and buses are direct air....air pressure from the resevors is regulated by pressure on the brake pedal which forces diaphrams to move levers applying the brakes
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Posted by J. Edgar on Wednesday, March 5, 2008 7:39 PM
i stand humbly corrected.....the Pennsy did indeed apply Westinghouse's brakes on certain passenger trains as early as 1870.....other railroads slowly followed....the Master Car-Builder test in 1886\7 were with freight trains as it was widely believed that the newfangled brakes wouldnt stop a heavy freight train
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 6, 2008 4:16 PM
 Poppa_Zit wrote:
 dsktc wrote:

Sadly, the company George Westinghouse founded no longer exists.

http://www.post-gazette.com/westinghouse/beginning.asp

The current corporate iteration, Westinghouse Electric Company, is owned by Toshiba and "provides fuel, services, technology, plant design, and equipment for the commercial nuclear electric power industry."

http://www.westinghousenuclear.com/index.shtm

The George Westinghouse Museum in Wilmerding has also closed, its collections and endowment acquired by the Historical Society of Western PA.

Dave

 

I used to work for the Westinghouse Broadcasting division (the "Group W") of Westinghouse Electric. It bought out and became today's CBS. Once a great company, Westinghouse pioneered TV and radio stations including the first commercial radio station in the U.S. -- KDKA in Pittsburgh.

George Westinghouse should be remembered as a genius in many arenas. He'd be equally famous as Thomas Edison if he'd self-promoted the way Edison did.

When Edison was trying to peddle to towns and industry his low-voltage direct current (DC) system -- which had the inherent attribute of not being able to move the current very far --Westinghouse Electric received the rights for the first patent for alternating-current (AC) transmission from Westinghouse's friend Nikola Tesla -- who greatly disliked Edison, mainly for innovative work he was never paid for.

Edison kept busy pushing the benefits of DC. In an attempt to discredit Tesla and Westinghouse, Edison went around the country electrocuting animals with AC.

Westinghouse Electric -- with Tesla's help -- built the first huge generating plant at Niagara Falls. Westinghouse Electric was the major competition for Edison's General Electric for decades and specialized in moving and delivering high voltage current long distances. Tesla had conceived the rotating magnetic field principle in 1882 and used it to invent the first brushless AC motor or induction motor in 1883.

Westinghouse supplied the power and lighting for the Chicago World Fair of 1893 (Columbian Exhibition) as well as some of the traction motors for the elevated electric rail shuttle trains that moved visitors around the fair.

He dedicated himself to making the nation's railroads safer and more efficient. He was only 19 years old when he debuted his first invention, the rotary steam engine. At age 21, he invented a "car replacer" -- the device to guide derailed railroad cars back onto the tracks. He also invented the reversible frog, the part of a railroad turnout (switch) to guide trains onto one of two tracks. Westinghouse also pursued many improvements in railroad signals (then using oil lamps) and in 1881 he founded the Union Switch and Signal Co. to manufacture his signaling and switching inventions.

The Westinghouse air brake:

 

 

KDKA's historic first broadcast of 2 November 1920 took place from atop the  K Building in Turtle Creek.  The K Building, which was demolished last year, was part of the massive East Pittsburgh Works of Westinghouse Electric Company, where Steam Generators were manufactured and transported by Schnabel Cars, by the way.  Westinghouse also produced electric locomotives there many decades ago.

http://www.kdkaradio.com/pages/15486.php

http://www.kdkaradio.com/pages/15491.php

http://southern.railfan.net/schnabel/cars/wecx102/westinghousegen.jpg

Dave 

 

 

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Posted by chad thomas on Thursday, March 6, 2008 4:38 PM
Nikola Tesla in my opinion was by far the greatest contributor to modern (and post modern) science. The full depth of his contributions to technology are still not fully understood today... 100 years later. It can be said that he invented so many things, but unfortuneaty got credit for virtualy none (although he iventually did get credit as the father of radio in the 30's). His contributions applied to sciences that were not even remotely concieved of at the time, includeing the kinnescope you are looking at right now and the logic concepts behind the screen. There could be (and are) books written about his relationships with Edison and Westinghouse. Not to get off topic but I highly recomend the book "Man Out of Time" to anyone interested in the history of Westinghouse, Edison or Tesla himself. His contributions are far beyond the relatively simple polyphase electrical generation/distribution systems we take for granted today.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 6, 2008 6:23 PM
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Posted by J. Edgar on Thursday, March 6, 2008 6:41 PM
 dsktc wrote:

The Air Brake:

http://books.google.com/books?id=L38hAAAAMAAJ

Dave

 

great link.... thx

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Thursday, March 6, 2008 10:14 PM
 Poppa_Zit wrote:

Edison kept busy pushing the benefits of DC. In an attempt to discredit Tesla and Westinghouse, Edison went around the country electrocuting animals with AC.

I've read that Edison wanted to have the use of the electric chair for executions officialy called "Westinghousing".

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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