Hatch Cover For A Covered Railroad Car Having Removable Closure and Screen Member
A hatch cover for hopper compartment opening with a coaming surrounding the opening. The hatch cover includes a peripheral skirt with a portion of the skirt spaced outwardly of the coaming when the hatch cover is closed to allow air flow from the exterior of the hatch cover to the opening. A frame has a center portion and an annular gasket which seats on the coaming with the center portion over the opening. The center portion of the frame may be a screen or may be solid. An annular ring is attached to the underside of the hatch cover. A press fit attachment is provided between the frame and the annular to permit attachment and removal of the frame from the annular ring. A latch mechanism is provided for the hatch cover. A spring anchor pin is supported on coaming brackets and a latching pin is supported on the hatch cover. A latch mechanism includes a handle having a pair of uprights located at one end of the handle. An outwardly opening slot is formed in each upright with the slots aligned with each other to be removeably engagable and pivot on the hatch cover latching pin. The mechanism also includes a compressibly loaded helical spring connected between the latch handle and the coaming spring anchor.
Railroad hopper cars carrying bulk particulate material, such as grain, plastic pellets or powered or granular products, are typically unloaded by applying a vacuum conveying line to an outlet gate positioned at the bottom of each car compartment. The primary airflow for the vacuum conveying line is obtained from the exterior of the railroad car. That it, the exhaust air for unloading is not drawn from the car compartment through the particulate matter but is drawn from outside the railroad car. Accordingly, the top of the car compartment must be vented to compensate for the particulate material drawn out the bottom of the compartment. Failure to vent the top of the compartment will reduce the efficiency of the vacuum unloading process and may even risk damage to the car structure. Manufacturers have responded to this problem by providing hatch covers that have filtered vents, however, for some types of materials, for example, materials used or intended for use as pharmaceuticals, such particulate materials must be protected against all types of contaminants even those which could pass through a screen or filter. In such situations, a solid hatch cover is required. A shipper of such sensitive materials who receives a hopper car having a vented hatch cover must either reject the car or replace the vented hatch cover with an unvented hatch cover. Likewise, a shipper who receives a hopper car with an unvented hatch cover and wishes to use a vacuum conveying line for unloading must replace the unvented hatch cover with a vented hatch cover.
The hatch cover of this invention permits easy replacement of a vented hatch cover with an unvented hatch cover or vice versa simply by changing only one component part of the hatch cover. This component which may be called a frame or a hatch opening closure member is held in position by a retaining ring which is attached to the underside of the hatch cover. In applicants' invention, one embodiment of the frame has a center portion in the form of a screen. This embodiment of the frame can be replaced with another embodiment of the frame which has a center portion in the form of an imperforate closure member, and vice versa. Removal and replacement is accomplished simply by opening the hatch cover, removing the existing frame from the retaining ring on the underside of the hatch cover and press fitting a new frame into the retaining ring. There are no fasteners to be removed and reinstalled.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention permits the use of a single hatch cover for both vented and unvented service on a covered hopper railroad car simply by changing only one component of the hatch cover assembly, namely the frame which is made in two embodiments, one with a screen and the other with an imperforate closure portion.
The frame may either have a center screen for vented operations or an imperforate closure portion for unvented operations. The frame may easily be replaced because there are no fasteners to be removed and reinstalled when the frame is removed and replaced. The frame which has either a center screen or a center imperforate portion includes an integrally formed gasket as its outer periphery. The gasket is press fitted into a retaining ring attached to the underside of the hatch cover. The other side of the gasket engages and seals the coaming of the hatch opening which leads into a storage compartment of a railroad hopper car. When engaging the coaming, the frame is held in place over the compartment opening by the weight of the hatch cover and the latching force acting against the hatch cover. When the hatch cover is opened, the frame and its gasket move away from the coaming with the hatch cover.
In order to accommodate itself to all of the different climatic conditions to which a railroad covered hopper car is exposed and without losing its sealing effectiveness, the frame is made of a flexible material, either natural or synthetic, which allow it to retain its flexibility and resiliency under variable weather conditions. The material from which the frame is made is selected to have a coefficient of expansion much greater than the coefficient of expansion of the material used to make the hatch cover and to which the frame is attached and held by a press fit.
To facilitate opening and closing of the hatch cover to change the frame or to load cargo into the compartment, a self adjusting hand operated latch is provided. When the latch is in its latched or locked position, it applies constant pressure to the hatch cover to maintain the gasket in a sealed condition against the hatch coaming regardless of the particular design of the hatch coaming which varies by manufacturer. The hand operated latch also eliminates the need for a hold down arm for the hatch cover.
The design of the hand operated latch of this invention with its resilient flexible attachment to the coaming instead of a fixed pivotal mounting permits its installation on hatch coamings of various manufacturers. Its resilient flexible attachment to the coaming and its slide-on, slide-off pivot attachment to the hatch cover adjusts for hatch covers and hatch cover mounting hardware of various sizes. The mounting of the latch provides an over-center locking arrangement for the latch mechanism which along with its flexibility and resiliency holds the hatch cover securely in its closed position in spite of wide temperature variations and operating conditions experienced by a covered hopper car during its travels.
The invention is illustrated more or less diagrammatically in the following drawings wherein:
As is most clearly shown in
An annular ring 51 formed of a suitable plastic such as ABS is shown in top plan view in
An annular frame 61, which is formed of a thermoplastic elastomer such as that sold under the trademark Elastocom 2860 X, is shown in top plan view in
A latch mechanism 75 shown in
When it is necessary to open the hatch cover 11 from its closed position which is shown in
Claims
1. A hatch cover for a covered hopper compartment having an opening with a coaming surrounding said opening, said hatch cover comprising:
- a peripheral skirt depending from said underside of said hatch cover with at least a portion of said peripheral skirt being spaced outwardly of said coaming when said hatch cover is closed to allow air flow from the exterior of said hatch cover to said opening,
- a frame having a center portion and an annular gasket which seats on said coaming with said center portion of said frame supported over said opening,
- an annular ring attached to said underside of said hatch cover, and
- annular sockets and annular ribs formed on said annular ring and said annular gasket of said frame for press fitted engagement to removably secure said frame to said annular ring.
2. The hatch cover of claim 1 in which said annular sockets are formed on said annular ring and said annular ribs are formed on said gasket of said frame.
3. The hatch cover of claim 1 in which said center portion of said frame is a screen.
4. The hatch cover of claim 1 in which said center portion of said frame is imperforate.
5. The hatch cover of claim 1 in which said annular gasket is a thermoplastic elastomer.
6. The hatch cover of claim 1 in which said annular ring includes upstanding posts extending from an upper surface of said annular ring and spaced apart around said annular ring and an annular groove formed on said underside of said hatch cover and formed and adapted to receive said upstanding posts to obstruct the movement of foreign objects in the air flow from reaching said opening around said coaming from the exterior of said hatch cover.
7. A latch mechanism for a hatch cover of a covered hopper compartment having an opening with a coaming surrounding said opening, a spring anchor pin supported between spaced brackets extending from said coaming and a latching pin supported between spaced brackets extending from said hatch cover, said latch mechanism comprising:
- a latch handle having an elongated planar portion with a pair of uprights located at one end thereof, an outwardly opening slot formed in each upright with said slots aligned with each other to removably engage and pivot on said hatch cover latching pin, and
- a flexible tensioning member connecting said latch handle and said coaming spring anchor pin.
8. The latch mechanism of claim 7 in which said flexible tensioning member is a compressibly loaded helical spring.
9. The latch mechanism of claim 8 in which another spring anchor pin is mounted on said latch mechanism and is located between said planar portion of said latch and said notches to receive an end of said compressively loaded helical spring and position said spring to provide an over center biasing force to close said planar portion of said latch against said hatch cover.
10. The latch mechanism of claim 9 in which said another spring anchor pin extends between said uprights of said latch mechanism.
11. A latch mechanism for a cover of the type which is pivotally mounted on a base,
- said cover having a pair of latching pins on a portion thereof located opposite to said pivotal mounting,
- said latch mechanism including a handle having a pair of tranversely spaced uprights, an outwardly opening slot formed in each upright with said slots aligned with each other to be removably engaged with and pivotable on said cover latching pins, and a resilient tensioning member connected between said latch handle and said base to permit said handle to be engaged with said latching pins and biased against said cover and to be removed from engagement with said latching pins while remaining connected to said base.
Type: Application
Filed: Dec 20, 2007
Publication Date: Jun 25, 2009
Inventors: Francis R. Schultz (Wheaton, IL), Lawrence L. Schultz (Cedar Rapids, IA)
Application Number: 11/961,225
International Classification: B61D 39/00 (20060101);