N&W Shop Codes (Was: Stencil on RS-11 Air Tank)
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Wed Jun 21 18:46:12 EDT 2023
Abram,
Regarding your post on air brake testing and stenciling, your thinking
that I might improve on what you wrote is a rare mistake on your part.
Although I worked as a supervisor in both the Shaffers Crossing
Locomotive Roundhouse and the Shaffers Crossing Freight Car Repair
Track, I did not appreciate the need to remember the details that you
obviously did, and even if tried I could not have remembered them as you
did. At least I enjoyed seeing many familiar terms from years ago in
your post, but I have nothing to add to your excellent account.
Gordon Hamilton
On 6/21/2023 10:41 AM, NW Mailing List wrote:
> Senator Rector's question about the stenciling on RS-11 main
> reservoirs led to a comment about N&W Shop Codes. Which is an
> almost-forgotten topic.
> Below is a list of the Shop Codes which I have found. There were
> obviously a few others over the years, which have now been lost.
> The place we working stiffs saw these codes was in the COT&S stencil
> on each side of each car. COT&S stood for
> Cleaned-Oiled-Tested-and-Stenciled. This information pertained to the
> Triple Valve in the air brake system on each car. (Modern weenies
> insist on it being called the "Control Valve," but I refuse to be
> reconstructed, so I still call it the Triple Valve. The function of
> that valve is to Charge, Apply and Release, and those functions are
> three in number, and three is called Triple, so the device is still
> the Triple Valve. Harrumph !!! )
> At one time, every freight car had to go to a Shop Track every two (?)
> years for test of its Triple Valve.
>
> At certain intervals (which I do not now recall,) the Triple Valve had
> to be "Cleaned, Oiled and Tested," which was generally done just by
> unbolting and removal of the Service and Emergency segments of the
> valve, and replacing them with reconditioned and properly tested
> valves segments.
> If either the Service or the Emergency portions of the Triple Valve
> failed to work, the brakes on that car might not apply, or they might
> not release, and if the piston did not move smoothly, in a graduated
> fashion, but released violently, that could result in a "kicker"
> situation where the air brakes on the entire train went into Emergency
> braking. And that caused delays and wrecks.
> The test of the Triple Valve given on a Shop Track was administered
> with a bench-mounted or a portable test rack called the Single Car
> Test Device. The portable devices were mounted on a small
> four-wheeled cart which could be pulled around the shop area. I will
> not attempt to describe how that device worked, as I would probably
> mess up the description, but if you are interested in this topic you
> will find descriptions in the Westinghouse Air Brake literature.
> So, to keep track of this periodicity of testing, each car which had
> received the was stenciled with the date and location of the latest
> test. The stencil would read something like this: COT&S SC 11-5-65.
> When Car Inspectors did their inbound train inspections, cars overdue
> for COT&S were tagged and set out. All the shop tag would say was
> "COT&S" and everyone knew what that meant. (Well, most people.)
> Things in the air brake side of railroading began to improve with the
> invention of the Neoprene Gasket and the Neoprene Diaphragm, somewhere
> around 1959. The great advance touted for the #26 brake equipment on
> engines was the introduction of the Neoprene diaphragm, replacing the
> moving brass piston. Pistons required good, effective lubrication in
> order to function properly; Neoprene diaphragms did not. And inside
> the freight car air brake Triple Valves, a diaphragm replaced one of
> the moving parts there, too. If you ever see an air brake marked
> "ABDW," the letter W indicates it functions with a diaphragm. "W"
> stands for Wilson, the Westinghouse mechanical engineer who invented
> the improvement, and the company named the new version in his honor.
> "AB," of course, stands for Air Brake, and D was the fourth version of
> the equipment since the AB valve replaced the original Type K Triple
> Valve sometime in the 1930s. As of my last contact with active
> railroading, the latest version of the Triple Valve was the ABDWX, and
> as I recall the "X" version incorporated some improvement designed to
> address the problem of drastically increasing train lengths.
> The railroads (and the lobbyists) have at last convinced the Feds that
> all these improvements have resulted in freight cars which can run
> forever without any attention to their air brake equipment, and now
> days the only time a car gets its Triple Valve tested is when it goes
> into a shop for some other work (e.g. broken carrier iron, bent
> ladder, door problems, draft gear work, brake beam, wheel work, wreck
> damage or whatever.) Just think about that for a while..... And as I
> recall, the period for required change-out of locomotive air brake
> equipment is now 96 months.
> There was another Shop Track test of the Triple Valve, which did not
> require removal of the Triple Valve components. That test was called
> the Single Car Test and was given with the portable Single Car Test
> Device. This was a pretty complicated and sensitive test and men who
> administered it had to be trained and certified on the test device and
> procedure. Cars which received this test were stenciled "IDT" with
> the date, e.g. IDT 11-5-65. "IDT" meant "In Date Test." The shop
> code may also have been included in the IDT stenciling, I just can't
> remember.
> Without doubt I have garbled a few details in the above description,
> especially as relates to the intervals at which the COT&S and the IDT
> tests were required. Mr. Gordon Hamilton, an N&W Mechanical Engineer
> who worked with such things, can level out the bumps in my rag-tag,
> fuzzy little Brakeman-grade description. Shucks, it was all I could
> handle to switch out the red cars from the green ones, without making
> a mistake...
> So, here are the Shop Codes, as best I have them:
> BL N&W Bluefield WV
> BR N&W Bristol VA
> CL N&W Clare Yard OH Cincinnati
> CO N&W Joyce Yard OH Columbus
> CR N&W Crewe VA
> DE N&W Denniston VA
> DU N&W Durham NC
> HA N&W Hagerstown MD
> IA N&W Iaeger WV
> KE N&W Kenova WV
> LP N&W Lambert Point Yard VA Norfolk
> LY N&W Lynchburg VA
> NK N&W Norfolk VA
> NO N&W Norton VA
> PO N&W Portsmouth OH
> PR N&W Princeton WV after 1959 (previously VGN)
> RA N&W Radford VA
> RI N&W Richlands VA
> RO N&W Roanoke VA
> SC N&W Shaffers Crossing VA Roanoke
> SH N&W Shenandoah VA
> WC N&W Wilcoe Yard VA Farm
> WI N&W Williamson WV
> Has anyone assembled a list of Shop Codes used on the Virginian? That
> would be a good job for Attorney Jerome Sandermann and Judge Bongiovanni.
> I have never looked up the exact origin of railroad shop codes. But
> the Safety Appliance Act of 1896 would be a good place to start
> looking for the origins. All those requirements were taken over in
> the ICC regulations, and all that morphed into truly massive Title 49
> of the United States Code of Federal Regulations... good grief. You
> can get Title 49 USC for free on the Internet and learn more than you
> ever wanted to know about the regulations under which American
> railroads must operate.
> reading that volume is a good replacement for sleeping pills.
> If anyone wants, I can take photos of a few brass air brake pistons
> from the insides of Triple Valves, which now live here.
> I also give advice on Farming, Horse Racing, the Lottery and Women.
> If you need counsel in any of these areas, Mr. Rector, just send me a
> Telegram.
> -- abram burnett,
> Send Up Your Old Turnips - Get Remanufactured Ones Back !
> ... and we will stencil them for COT&S and IDT, too !
>
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