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Buffers


Buffers became a standard fitting in the early 1830's, allowing the couplings to be mounted on the end of the chassis rather than on the top as had been done before. By this time several railway companies lines had been linked and rolling stock had begun to wander across the system. There were some problems however, all the rolling stock on the Liverpool & Manchester line of the 1830's was a maximum of about six foot wide but other companies built wagons of up to seven foot wide and private owner coal wagons were a decidedly mixed bunch. The chauldron hopper wagons in particular had buffers rather low down and close together due to their design. All too often buffers on different companies wagons did not match, either in height or spacing, and several companies built wagons with two sets of buffers; an outer pair for working with general rolling stock and an inner pair for buffing up to chauldron wagons (the 'skeliton' (sic)' container wagon shown in the Historical Background section has this feature). In the North East where chaldrons remained in common use there were several wagon designs with conventional buffers but with heavy end stanchions extending down to buffer to the chaldrons that were still in use on private colliery lines. The Railway Clearing House specification for Private Owner Wagons of 1887 finally defined the standard size and position of buffers (roughly a foot in diameter with centres about five foot eight inches apart and three foot four inches above rail height).

On early goods stock buffers usually consisted of wooden blocks with a metal end cap, called 'dumb buffers'. On passenger stock and horse boxes the dumb buffers were sometimes padded with layers of felt covered in leather to (hopefully) reduce the shock but this had little effect in practice. Modelling dumb buffers on a standard proprietary chassis is not difficult. The best option is to cut the buffer head off, leaving the buffer housing and build this up with fine grade Milliput. An old modelling knife blade, moistened with little spittle, can be used to smooth the putty to shape. I originally tried cutting the buffers right off and adding lengths of square section plastic but I found I had to make a rebate in the chassis 'headstock' to get a sufficiently strong joint.

Sprung buffers were introduced in the 1830's on the Liverpool & Manchester Railway's second generation of first class passenger coaches and gradually appeared on all passenger stock. The railway companies found the dumb buffers offered little protection and phased them out on new goods wagons built from the 1850's and 1860's, replacing them with buffers fitted with springs. Dumb buffers were declared obsolete by the RCH in their 1909 specification and became illegal as of 1914. There were exceptions however; some railway company service or 'departmental' vehicles survived for a few years and two wagons permanently coupled together, such as the GWR `Mite' single bolster wagon pairs, were permitted to have a dumb buffering arrangement between them, but spring loaded buffers would be fitted on the outer ends. In Scotland private owner coal wagons appear to have survived with dumb buffers up to about 1920, but probably the last were seen in the early 1930's on the short wheel base pre-grouping open wagons in departmental service on the Southern Railway.

One common method of adding springing to buffers was to extend the shank back through the headstock and add a coil spring or block of rubber behind the shank to absorb the shock. The rubber block could not break whereas a spring might and rubber blocks were favoured by the LNER among others.

In 1831 an engineer by the name of Sir John Brown (1816-1896) invented a flat conical steel spring for use in railway vehicle buffers. This kind of spring is called a 'volute spring', it has a spiral coil rather than the more familiar helical coil and the whole assembly could be fitted to the face of the headstock of the wagons without having to drill a hole. The volute spring type of buffer became known as the 'self contained buffer'. The illustration below is scanned from a 1930s Carriage and Wagon Builders pocket book, it was part of an advert for Ring Springs Ltd of London.

Fig___ Cross section of volute spring buffer

Cross section of volute spring buffer



A cheaper alternative was developed in 1855 and was used on most goods vehicles. This type used a large transverse leaf spring behind the headstock with the coupling hook attached to the centre and the shanks of the buffers resting against the outer ends. This spring thus fulfilled two functions; as the coupling tightened the shock was in part absorbed by the spring, when the wagon ran into something such as another wagon or a 'buffer stop' at the end of a siding, the buffers were pushed back against the ends of the leaf spring absorbing the shock. At speeds of up to 15 or 20 mph, this was enough to avoid damage to delicate items being carried in the wagon. This arrangement was called the transverse spring buffing gear.

Fig ___ Action of transverse spring buffing gear Action of transverse spring buffing gear


As noted above the transverse spring arrangement could be used with semi-continuous coupling but to meet the RCH 1923 specification the coupling rod needed to be a single piece for which self contained buffers of either the coil or volute spring type were required.

One curious hybrid design had sprung buffers at one end and dumb buffers at the other. These were disliked by the railway companies and the arrangement was generally confined to privately owned coal wagons. As noted above all dumb buffers were supposedly 'illegal' after 1914 but I believe a few coal wagons with mixed spring and dumb buffers survived in the Liverpool area up to about 1920. This idea was quite widely used on small colliery wagons (notably in Wales and in the North West of England). Colliery wagons of this type would not have been seen on railway company trains after about 1900 but remained in use at the mines until the 1920's. They had a short wheel base of between five and six foot and were fitted with a door at one end only, no side doors were fitted. All the ironwork on the chassis and body was usually painted black but the body was generally in plain unpainted wood with the name of the colliery, or just the initials and a two digit number painted on the side in black or white.

Fig ___ Small colliery wagon with dumb and sprung buffers. Small colliery wagon with dumb and sprung buffers.



All these small wagons can be made from a Peco five plank open wagon kit. My models have sprung buffers at both ends as the layout they were built for is set in 1925, rather late for dumb buffers, TLC stands for Tickling Lower Colliery. The seven plank side door only wagon (shown in the lower right) is a freelance design. This was made just to see what it looked like, I didn't like it but it found employment taking coke from the gas works to feed the producer gas plant at the wagon works. Modelling these wagons was described in detail in Railway Modeller Sept 2001 (Traffic for Tickling Article 5).

In the 1950's British Railways developed self-contained hydraulic buffer systems which were fitted on all new stock. These had oil inside the buffer casing with a sealed air reservoir behind that. When the buffer ran into something the shank of the buffer acted like a piston forcing the oil into the air space and compressing the air. As the pressure on the buffer eased the compressed air then pushed the buffer back out. Early designs were quite long and lean and had the reservoir behind the headstock but the later 'Oleo' design (the lower buffer in the photograph) was a much fatter contraption.

Fig ___ BR hydraulic buffers

BR hydraulic buffers



The screw coupling used on the continent is longer than the British type so wagons for ferry use often had a packing piece fitted to the headstock to push the buffers further out.



As noted above, following the 1887 RCH specification, the size of the buffer head was typically about twelve to fifteen inches diameter. When wagons were pushed through tight curves the standard circular shaped buffer heads could slip past each other, called 'buffer locking'. As the track straightened again the locked buffers exerted a sideways force which often resulted in damage to the wagons involved, sometimes in derailments. Longer wheel base stock was more prone to this problem, which is one reason why small wagons were preferred by collieries where curves were often tight. Some northern companies tried making the left hand buffer head a dish shape to mate up with the bulge on the facing head of the next wagon. This helped but the idea was not widely adopted. To reduce the risk of buffer locking on longer wheel base and bogie vehicles the buffer heads were made a wider oval shape which was less likely to slip past the opposing buffer head. Where curves were very tight, such as in mines, factories and docks, the very short wheel base locomotives were often fitted with unusually large buffer heads, up to two foot diameter in some cases.

Fig ___ Buffer designs Sketches showing various buffer designs




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