Perhaps it was also a result of a Google search for Allison Janney, who played a character in the West Wing TV series - no doubt search results would more often pick up on her than on a railway coupling? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.94.137.1 (talk) 13:03, 26 April 2013 (UTC)Reply
Which railways use Janney couplers?
Latest comment: 15 June 20114 comments2 people in discussion
A more complete list of railways that use Janney couplers would be nice!
Actually, Tabletop, I'm not sure you're right about China's use of Janney couplings. I've spent a bit of time there, and I was sure that Chinese couplings more closely resembled the Russian ones. The old Metro-Cammell trains once used by the KCR in Hong Kong had knuckle couplings that rather resembled Janneys. -------Kelisi User:Kelisi
Substantially the same content is now duplicated at Coupling (railway) and Coupler. We should standardise on one and make the other a redirect or disambiguation page. The accurate content at Coupler predates Coupling (railway), so that might be an argument in one direction. The word 'coupler' is more common in US English, while 'coupling' is more common in British English (probably because a European railway coupling is not a single device, but rather the combination of hook and chain for draft forces and buffers for buff force). —Morven 07:24, Jan 26, 2005 (UTC)
The problem I have with that is that it is only more complete after having copied the content of the Coupler article. —Morven 18:18, Jan 26, 2005 (UTC)
Article melding
As mentioned further up, I am responsible for the melding of the two articles.
While it is true that the Coupling article is more complete now owing to copying from the Coupler article, there were a few things, most of which have been retained, in the former which made it more complete in its own way. The Coupler article focused mainly on the development of railway couplings in North America (specifically in the USA), and although it mentioned the buffers and chain and Scharfenberg couplings used elsewhere, the Coupling article mentioned other systems, such as the meatchopper and Russian system.
I believe that the two articles have now been melded in a more or less coherent way, and I'm all for keeping it as it stands now, other than pertinent additions that other editors might choose to make.
And yes, a "Coupler" search should redirect the searcher to "Coupling". The only problem is that the "coupler" article does mention another use for this word, and I can personally think of two or three other usages. So, perhaps a search of "coupler" should lead to a disambiguation page from which there should be a link to "Coupling (railway)".
Kelisi 2005/1/26
What about three-link couplers?
Latest comment: 22 May 20091 comment1 person in discussion
Section heading but no further comments were added by anon editor at 213.78.107.245
Good question. First off, do you have a definition or another reference that discusses them? I haven't heard of this kind before. slambo 20:18, July 12, 2005 (UTC)
Before there were screw couplings there were three link couplings, say around 1850. To reduce the slack, the middle link was replaced with a screw thread which could tighten or losen the coupling. Tabletop (talk) 01:13, 22 May 2009 (UTC)Reply
Different types in the UK
Latest comment: 28 February 20116 comments5 people in discussion
I admit I don't know a lot about different coupling types, but I do know there are at least three used in the UK, Dellner, BSI, Scarfenburg, Hook and Chain, tightlock etc. Some of these might the same but with different names.
Wedgelock - This might be proprietry to London Underground?
Except it seems more complicated than this! It really ought to be covered in the article (or even a sub-article!) if anyone understands it better than me. Is there a difference between Dellner and Scharfenburg other than manufacturer? Thryduulf 11:53, 26 January 2006 (UTC) Peter HornUser talk14:49, 28 March 2011 (UTC)Reply
I would say that this article is too heavily biased towards the US types (I have only ever heard Janey coupling called "Buckeye" in the UK). First move to improve thinks might be a list of types with a photo and a brief description. Perhaps a separate article for each major type could be justified. Also to be noted is the number of variations.
As for types, add - "Ward Coupling", used on the London Underground; "ABC" and "Grondana" (spelling might be wrong), both used on narrow gauge lines in Africa and/or India. AHEMSLTD12:54, 26 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
I've found some better photos for some of the types above, and a good article on how some types - but nothing on how the BSI coupler works. I'll ask on a mailing list I'm on. Thryduulf15:51, 15 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
This section mentions Blue Square and Yellow Triangle codes. These aren't differing couplings, rather they are differing types of control equipment for powered vehicles (which are all coupled using standard screw couplings). Blue Square can be coupled to Yellow Triangle or Red Diamond but they couldn't be controlled. Propose deleting section as it's a control feature, not a coupling one.Patrick lovell (talk) 14:43, 23 December 2009 (UTC)Reply
Introduced to the UK by the LNER, I believe. Examples can be found on the back of several preserved locomotives, including Flying Scotsman
From my 1963 Ian Allen British Railways Motive Power, there were seven systems for diesel locomotives (Blue Star, Red Circle, Orange Square, White Diamond, Yellow Triangle, Red Diamond and Red/White Square) and five system for DMUs (Red Triangle, White Circle, Yellow Diamond, Blue Square and Orange Star). It doesn't mention electric locos or EMUs but they had their own systems. However, every single one of them used a conventional screw coupling. All the locos might be called upon to haul freight trains, most of which had old-fashioned couplings, and the DMUs had to be compatible with the locos. BR coaches had Buckeye couplers, just like the LNER coaches before them, but I observed Class 47 and Class 87 locos coupling to them with screw couplings on Intercity trains in the 1990s. Later types, such as the Class 90, use Buckeyes. The 1989 edition says that Southern EMUs built by BR used Buckeyes, connected by an SR-specific electro-pneumatic control system. Class33/1s and Class 73s also had this fitted, so that they could work with EMUs.
Latest comment: 25 July 20125 comments2 people in discussion
Soviet railways borrowed quite a lot of ideas from the AAR manuals, automatic couplers not being one of them. Presumably they thought that they could do better, with 100 years of experience to play with, especially as there was no need to be compatible for convenient interrunning.
What are the advantages of the SA3 over the Janney?
I think the main advantage is that the SA3 is a single unit with no moving parts required to actually couple up, the only drawback is that the necessary locks are contained within the body of the coupler and are hence somewhat inaccessible. SA3 couplers do not require being bashed together to connect either, and as far as I know they can be uncoupled under load. To allow for the necessary slack the couplers must have dampers inside the body of the rail vehicle.
How would the maximum tonneage of the SA3 compare to the Janney?
I don't know - I think the main reason that the knuckle coupler is stated to have a larger maximum tonneage is simply because the trains which have SA3 couplers are nowhere near the length and weight of those which use knuckle couplers. Russian rolling stock might be the same size as their North American equivalents, but I don't think Russian freight trains are, on average, over 1.6 - 2 km long, like most American ones.--Robbie aka Zoqaeski12:28, 15 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
Russia has a lot of cold snow and ice which might clog up the AAR coupler but which might NOT clog up the SA3 ! Comments anyone ? Tabletop (talk) 11:07, 25 July 2012 (UTC)Reply
BSI coupling
Latest comment: 15 April 20061 comment1 person in discussion
I've found some better photos for some of the types above, and a good article on how some types - but nothing on how the BSI coupler works. I'll ask on a mailing list I'm on. Thryduulf 15:51, 15 April 2006 (UTC) User:Thryduulf
New Coupler design
Latest comment: 16 November 20103 comments3 people in discussion
Does anyone know anything about this design of coupler? It's fitted to the FLIRT series of EMUs built by Stadler. If anyone can find sufficient information about it, perhaps a section on fully automatic couplings should be added (differing from plain automatic couplings in that all the connections are made without human intervention.
I'll make a start and add some information on the Scharfenberg coupler.
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I am sorry if I have started an edit war but the part about buffer and chain being safer than central was just the opposite ofthe truth. There are many killed everey year by being squashed between the buffers. By intensive propaganda about being careful the number is lower than it was half a cetury before but still far too high. Seniorsag15:51, 7 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
Hi Seniorsag. Can you quote any references for this - any statistics to back up the claim that centre-buffers are inherently safer? It seems to me that any situation where a person is between two items of rolling stock where one may move is potentially dangerous. Adequate training and operating procedures & individuals taking care are likely to be as much to do with increased safety as the actual method of coupling. Whether you're crushed by two centre couplings coming together, or by a pair of buffers, the result is much the same. Regards Lynbarn20:33, 7 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
Answer (without statistics)
When you use a central coupler you can stand aside (and take a step back) without risk of chrushing, BUT with chain or screwcouplers with buffers you have to stand between the buffer and hook to coupple. If you stand to far back you are chrushed, OR if you are late and don´t want to duck under the buffer to hook up and do not get out of the buffer you are chrushed. The same problem but only for hands exists for pin and link. You have to steer the link in into the "buffers".
I dont think we have had a single accident with a worker being squashed duing coupling work in Finland for very many years. They tend to move the two wagons together before getting "in there" to put the chain on the hook. We use the chain system on many freight trains and older passanger trains. Dvortex13:22, 14 September 2007 (UTC)Reply
This article has been delisted per the discussion, now in archive, found here. Once the issues have been addressed and the article is brought up to the standards listed at WP:WIAGA, the article may be renominated at WP:GAC. Best regards, LARA♥LOVE03:59, 31 August 2007 (UTC)Reply
"Meatchopper" couplings?
Latest comment: 19 November 20107 comments4 people in discussion
I have changed the name "Meatchopper" coupler to "Norwegian" coupler throughout the article. I have always known these couplers to be called "Norwegian" and a quick Google search turned up no references to the term meatchopper in this context. If anyone can find a good source for Meatchopper, please add that term back in with the source. Thanks, Gwernol14:47, 26 December 2007 (UTC)Reply
The Norwegian coupler was first used in Template:Railgauge Norway, and many railways copied the basic idea, but varied the details. Queensland and Tasmania used buffers and hook on their early Template:Railgauge as did Mali and Ivory Coast on their Template:Railgauge lines. Most other narrow gauge lines use the Norwegian, by this name or some other name. Tabletop (talk) 02:23, 29 September 2009 (UTC)Reply
I guessed the name might have come from Norway originally :o) Do you have a ref for this, as it must be missing from the article. -- EdJogg (talk) 09:01, 29 September 2009 (UTC)Reply
Carl Pihl from Norway was a early if not the earliest pioneer of narrow gauge (Template:Railgauge lines), and he presumably devised the Norwegian coupler for NG use
with its sharp curves. The coupler was widely copied elsewhere on NG lines, though not in Queensland or Tasmania, which kept the buffers like England. Maybe the Norwegian coupler is lighter or handles sharp curves better? Tabletop (talk) 05:22, 19 November 2010 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 15 November 20102 comments2 people in discussion
"The AAR coupler has stood the test of time since its invention, and has seen only minor changes:
"It is clear that the original Janney coupler is no longer compatible with the latest AAR couplers."
These statements occur one right after the other, and seem contradictory. If the changes have been "only minor," why is the Janney incompatible with the AAR couplers? 66.234.220.195 (talk) 16:27, 11 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 25 March 20094 comments3 people in discussion
I've got a nice image of a railroad coupling Image:Railroad Coupling (CMRR).jpg that I took on the Catskill Mountain Railroad last summer. I think it meets all the technical requirements to be a featured picture, except that it's missing a good caption. Unfortunately, I don't know enough about the subject matter to write a good informative caption. I mean, it's a coupling, right? What do I know? Somebody must know what kind of coupling it is, when it was made, all that good stuff. If you could fill that in, and find an appropriate place to work it into this article, then I think we'd have a winner. -- RoySmith(talk)05:13, 4 March 2008 (UTC)Reply
There are already 5 pictures/diagrams of the Janney/AAR coupler, from various views. Your sixth picture could be put in the gallery. You picture shows significantly different drawgear, and a fair amount of slack. Tabletop (talk) 00:58, 25 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
A small problem with this picture is how does one make it reasonably small. It is otherwise huge:
Latest comment: 30 August 20091 comment1 person in discussion
What does it mean to be "bufferlocked"? I have an idea from the article, but either a link to an article describing or explaining it, or a parenthetical explanation (e.g., "buffers slide away from each other on a curve so that one gets hooked behind the other," or whatever explanation is accurate and understandable) ought to be included. 69.42.7.98 (talk) 14:56, 30 August 2009 (UTC)Reply
Not original research, just visual comparison.
Latest comment: 16 November 20102 comments1 person in discussion
The Original contour is that shown on the patent drawing(s). The actual contour is that of first prototype or the first production model, and the latter is the one still in use today. Peter HornUser talk00:49, 16 November 2010 (UTC)Reply
Additional image
Latest comment: 22 May 20101 comment1 person in discussion
The railways in the Middle East, Arabia, and North Africa (especially the standard gauge ones) don't yet join up much, but are likely to do so in the foreseeable future as large if not vast sums of money are spend on them. Links to Europe and China are also likely. Concentrating on locomotives and freight wagons since passenger units tend to have their own automatic couplings, there are three couplings in use, AAR, SA3 and Buffers, with the addition of dual fitment and adaptors. What are these systems likely to be? Tabletop (talk) 00:11, 16 November 2010 (UTC)Reply
Clarification needed
Latest comment: 16 April 20124 comments2 people in discussion
Re Coupling (railway)#Dual coupling: Locomotives and some freight cars of the Indian Railways are fitted with a 'transition coupler' that incorporates a screw coupling hook within an SA3 coupler: the head of the coupler remains in position and does not swing away when not in use. The screw coupling hook is mounted on a lug within the coupler which is built by SAB WABCO.[7] (The previous text made no sense compared to what is shown on the link) Most Indian freight cars use the SA3 coupler alone, without buffers, whereas passenger coaches almost exclusively use screw couplers and buffers. Exceptions are the new LHB coaches imported from Europe, and a few other makes of carriages converted to use knuckle couplers.[8][9]Why would passsenger cars use tightlock coulplers and freight cars use SA3 couplers??? I smell rotten fish. It seems/appears that the following diagram is totally misleading [7]. I think I'll revert my revision(s) and get rid of that misleading image Peter HornUser talk00:30, 19 November 2010 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 23 May 20133 comments3 people in discussion
A search for "draft gear" points to this article, which doesn't even use the term, let alone describe the subject. It does seem a logical place for the subject, though. 208.103.155.224 (talk) 09:45, 21 January 2011 (UTC)Reply
Added a redirect from draft gear, and a mention in the lead section.
Latest comment: 3 April 20141 comment1 person in discussion
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Latest comment: 14 April 20161 comment1 person in discussion
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Latest comment: 30 October 20161 comment1 person in discussion
I see that on the sar3 section it is mentioned that Finland use sar3.
That is wrong, they have stayed with Russian gauge but also stayed with screwcouplers. If you go the Helsinki railway station and look at the train to Petersburg you will see that there are buggers and sar3 on the Russian locomotive and an adapter for screw coupler. (I once saw when the adapter got in wrong and they worked with sledgehammer for many minutes to get the adapter out. After they got it out everything worked fine, with the same adapter.)Seniorsag (talk) 15:56, 30 October 2016 (UTC)Reply
3 link coupling
Latest comment: 30 October 20161 comment1 person in discussion
I saw something about English 3 link and screw coupling.
England for a long time used 3 link, sometime late they invented a triangular link (sometime after the war) which in one position gave the long slack coupling and in the other a short stiff coupling. It was faster but not quite as good as screw.
Reason for slack coupling is that when you are not using rollerbearings you must have slack between the carriages to be able to start rolling on one at a time. after rolling about a ½ turn there are oil back in the bearing and friction is about nil, but before it is metal to metal and need a high breakavay force. The locomotive can break and start a few carriages at a time but not a long train. The same applies in cold wheater when the snow have melted from brake heat and train have stood long enough for the water to freese. (Worse if driver forgot to release the brakes just before stopping and the brakeblocks are frozen to the wheel! Solution: reverse so the springing in the buffers will enable you to break lose one carriage at a time.)Seniorsag (talk) 16:11, 30 October 2016 (UTC)Reply
Yet another new one
Latest comment: 1 February 20192 comments1 person in discussion
In "The Locomotive Manipulation" (S07E15 of TBBT), Sheldon asks the waiter in the dining car whether it still has the original link-and-pin coupler or the Miller Hook and platform. His neighbour Eric replies "neither" and names the AAR TypeE coupler instead. Would that rather modern coupling really be alright for a historic train? --Kolya (talk) 16:22, 14 September 2019 (UTC)Reply
Except for some of the smaller narrow gauge lines (and not even US ones) I'd be amazed to see anything using link-and-pin. For one thing, they're unsafe to work with for the train crew (you have to get far too close to moving rolling stock when coupling up), unless it's narrow gauge and you can lean in safely from the side. I'd expect the employer's liability insurers to be keen to get rid of any in use.
The Miller hook (I've never even seen one) was a US thing of the late 19th century. I suppose some museum somewhere will have an example, but again I'd be surprised to see any running on a tourist line.
The AAR is what the Napa Valley Wine Train was built with. It's not common in Europe until post-WWII, but they came to dominate US standard gauge working between the wars. For 1950s US diesel stock, I wouldn't expect anything else.
No. The firm has only been going since 1987, whereas the Wedglock coupler used on the London Underground has been around since the introduction of the 1935 Tube Stock. Besides that, the couplings described are means of attaching a bucket, shovel etc. to an excavator. Totally different. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 22:34, 16 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
Loads
Latest comment: 19 April 20221 comment1 person in discussion
What are the maximum trailing loads for the different types of coupling? Consider no mid-train locomotives and/or end-of-train locomotives. ----MountVic127 (talk) 02:47, 19 April 2022 (UTC)Reply
The gallery that User:Peter Horn is repeatedly trying to insert makes this article nigh unreadable. The gallery, set to a height of 300px, takes up the entire screen, and the caption on one of the images becomes massively distorted. The images in that section should be left as thumbnails. This is bad enough when I'm looking at it on my PC, on mobile the article most certainly becomes unreadable. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 01:06, 23 September 2022 (UTC)Reply
Template:Ping What is the problem? Ding things your way leaves for immage/files detached from and floating away from the pertinent sections
File:Carrage couplings on ABT Railway (3939380014).jpgScrew-tensioned three-link coupling, shown attached but not yet tensioned; when tightened, the turnbuckle draws the buffers together, eliminating jarring and shocks when starting or slowing the train. The narrow buffers of the left-hand vehicle are sprung; the thicker buffers on the right contain a hydraulic damper. The sprung buffers allow for some train articulation even when the cars are drawn firmly together.
The article is primarily a list of types, and it simply tries to be comprehensive about listing every type that is or has been used. That's great and is highly valuable, but it would be very helpful to have some kind of summary of the main types in use now. It could be that the section listing different types could start with a category that is the main types in use now, followed by types that are in use limited areas or applications, followed by obsolete or mostly obsolete types. Or it could be a section before that, that gives a quick overview of the main types in use now without as much detail about them. This could be part of the lead. Another way to address this would be to have a table of types and where and when they have been used.
Latest comment: 14 July 20231 comment1 person in discussion
The accident subsection at the end makes an unsourced statement that different coupler types have different accident rates... followed by two singular accident examples. In an article currently focused on many many different equipment styles, this subsection seems unhelpful Remove it? Youblend2 (talk) 23:11, 14 July 2023 (UTC)Reply