tramcar trev
all manner of mechanical apparatus...
An authorative discourse on trolley wheels.
After the amazing experience of running a tram using the trolley wheel I experimented to try and discover exactly why some wheels jumped off the wire and others stayed on it.
Wheels that are fixed have the advantage that the dragging action along the wire tends to keep them clean but they also tend to climb over the wire and flick off if the wire presents itself in any position other than directly ?into? the wheel.
Wheels that rotate have the disadvantage that the rolling action tends to press dirt into the collecting face of the wheel but have the advantage that even if the wire is presented at an angle to the wheel they tend to stay where I want them especially if there is a little axial play in the wheel. The wheels can be easily cleaned though with a cotton bud and some metho.
The wheel diameter also has a bearing on this too, 6mm dia trolley wheels will de-wire at the least provocation where as a more reasonably sized 8mm wheel with a thickness of just under 2mm with a 1.5mm groove (just over 2 times the trolley wire diameter) seems to be ideal and I have adopted it as standard. Maybe not strictly to scale (5/16? diameter) but they look quite ok and only the most robust rivet counter would notice?.
I knocked up a batch of what started out to be 9 but ended up as 6, 3 being ?lost? in the manufacturing process?..
The ?harp is from 1/8" sq brass tube with a small length of 3/32" round tube soldered into it that has a 1/16? bore which will be soldered onto the ends of the trolley poles. The wheel slot I machined out on the micro mill using a 2mm carbide ?Dremel? cutter?
The axles are held in place by simply inserting the sharp end of a scriber into the centre hole and pushing down with a bit of a wiggle; this expands the tubular axle into the hole in the ?harp? and holds it secure. Electrical continuity is ensured by then carefully placing about 3/5ths of one nano skerrick of solder paste on one side and carefully heating it up to allow it to bond the joint.
I wish I had paid for the CNC machinery now?.
Ok now the tricky bit; stringing the rest of the overhead?.
After the amazing experience of running a tram using the trolley wheel I experimented to try and discover exactly why some wheels jumped off the wire and others stayed on it.
Wheels that are fixed have the advantage that the dragging action along the wire tends to keep them clean but they also tend to climb over the wire and flick off if the wire presents itself in any position other than directly ?into? the wheel.
Wheels that rotate have the disadvantage that the rolling action tends to press dirt into the collecting face of the wheel but have the advantage that even if the wire is presented at an angle to the wheel they tend to stay where I want them especially if there is a little axial play in the wheel. The wheels can be easily cleaned though with a cotton bud and some metho.
The wheel diameter also has a bearing on this too, 6mm dia trolley wheels will de-wire at the least provocation where as a more reasonably sized 8mm wheel with a thickness of just under 2mm with a 1.5mm groove (just over 2 times the trolley wire diameter) seems to be ideal and I have adopted it as standard. Maybe not strictly to scale (5/16? diameter) but they look quite ok and only the most robust rivet counter would notice?.
I knocked up a batch of what started out to be 9 but ended up as 6, 3 being ?lost? in the manufacturing process?..
The ?harp is from 1/8" sq brass tube with a small length of 3/32" round tube soldered into it that has a 1/16? bore which will be soldered onto the ends of the trolley poles. The wheel slot I machined out on the micro mill using a 2mm carbide ?Dremel? cutter?
The axles are held in place by simply inserting the sharp end of a scriber into the centre hole and pushing down with a bit of a wiggle; this expands the tubular axle into the hole in the ?harp? and holds it secure. Electrical continuity is ensured by then carefully placing about 3/5ths of one nano skerrick of solder paste on one side and carefully heating it up to allow it to bond the joint.
I wish I had paid for the CNC machinery now?.
Ok now the tricky bit; stringing the rest of the overhead?.



And the collective noun for a group of trolley wheels is?????
