THE BOYNTON UNICYCLE RAILROAD.
Scientific American, March 28, 1891
During several weeks last summer there were in regular and
continuous operation, in railway passenger service, the locomotive
and cars shown in the lower view herewith presented, the service
being between Gravesend and Coney Island, on an abandoned section
of an old standard gauge track of the Sea Beach and Brighton Railroad.
The locomotive weighs nine tons, and has two 10 by 12 inch cylinders,
the piston rods of both being Connected with cranks on each side
the single six-foot driving wheel, and the front of the locomotive
being also supported by two 38-inch pony wheels, one behind the
other. These wheels have double flanges, to contact with either
side of the track rail, as also have similarly arranged pairs
of 38-inch wheels arranged under and housed in the floors near
each end of the cars.
In the upper view is shown an improved locomotive especially
designed for this method of traction, and built for use on a street
railway of a Western city. It weighs sixteen tons and has a pair
of five-foot drivers. The crank is only seven inches in length,
and the engine is designed to readily make 600 revolutions a minute,
and maintain a speed of 100 miles an hour with a full train of
passenger cars. The first Boynton locomotive, described in the
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
in September, 1889, had an eight-foot driving wheel and weighed
23 tons. It proved too heavy for use on the old Coney Island road,
although it was undoubtedly capable of making very high speed
and easily drawing a heavy train of single-wheel cars on a properly
arranged track.
In a true line with, and fifteen feet directly above, the face
of the track rail is the lower face of a guide rail, supported
from posts arranged along the side of the track, and on the sides
of this guide rail run pairs of rubber-faced trolley wheels attached
to the top of the locomotive and the cars. The guide rail is a
simple stringer of yellow pine, 4¼ by 8 inches in section,
and the standards on which the trolley wheels are journaled are
placed far enough apart to allow a space of six inches between
the contiguous faces of each pair of wheels, thus affording 1¾
inches for lateral play, or sidewise movement toward or from the
guard rail, it being designed that the guide rail shall be arranged
in the exact line of the true center of gravity of the cars and
locomotive. The standards are bolted to six-inch wide strap iron
attached to and extending across the top of the car.
The switching arrangement is remarkably simple. In addition
to an ordinary track switch, in which, however, the switch bar
is made to throw only one rail, a connection is made by means
of a vertical rod and upper switch bar with a shifting section
of the guide rail, whereby, on the moving of the track rail and
the setting of the signal, the guide rail will be simultaneously
moved, the adjustment being effected and both being locked in
position according to the methods usual in ordinary railway practice.
The cars, as will be seen, are each two stories in height,
each story being divided lengthwise into nine separate compartments,
each of which will comfortably seat four passengers, thus providing
seats for seventy-two passengers in each car. Each compartment
has its own sliding door, and all the doors on the same floor
of the car are connected by rods at the top and bottom with a
lever in convenient reach of the brakeman, by whom the doors are
all opened and closed simultaneously. The compartments are each
four feet wide and five feet long, the seats facing each other.
Only one rail of the old single track was used, as only one guide
rail had been erected, except at the ends of the route, for switching
purposes, but the width of the cars and motor was such that it
only required the erection of another guide rail, for the utilizing
of the other track rail, to form a regular double-track road of
the Boynton pattern.
The section of road on which this system has been operated
is only 1¾ miles long, in which distance the curves are
considerable, but, although they are mostly in one direction,
the indications of wear upon the traction wheels, and upon the
guide rail and trolley wheels, were hardly perceptible. During
a portion of the season, when the summer travel to Coney Island
was at its height, trains were run on regular schedule time, fifty
three-car trains daily each way, carrying from one to three hundred
passengers per trip. The regular time taken for the run was three
minutes, but special trips were made in two and three-quarter
minutes each, including starting and stopping. The daily consumption
of coal in performing this service was but half a ton. The great
economy of this method of traction is also evidenced by the smoothness
with which the cars run, and the entire absence of side motion
and vibration, there being no striking and grinding of the wheel
flanges upon the rails, as is common on double-track roads. From
a seat in the top part of the tender, where one could observe
how the trolley wheels followed the guide rail, it was noticed
that frequently, for considerable distances, these wheels did
not touch the guide rail at all on either side, and when they
did approach and bear upon the guide rail it was with a gently
swaying movement, indicating no expenditure of power at this point,
and apparently having no effect upon the motion of the car. This
was, of course, to be expected, in this system of locomotion,
when a high speed is attained, and it is upon this point that
the claim is made by the advocates of such systems, that in this
way only is it possible to obtain greatly increased speeds on
railways with the present styles of motors.
Oddities
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