[0001] This invention relates to the design of a covered railway wagon, in which at least
one cover section consists of walls that are rotatable with regard to each other and
can be lifted and separated by their lower edges into a switch position in order to
open up the wagon partly; the wagon contains first rail sections, which, bearing onto
the lower surface of support rolls mounted on bearings in the cover section, lift
the support rolls from a position in which the walls are closed onto fixed run rails
of the wagon frame, whereby the second rail sections are removed to the side and the
first rail sections are aligned with these fixed run rails in their openings, thus
forming a uniform running surface for the support rolls, along which the support rolls
may roll and thus enable to transfer the cover section in the longitudinal direction
of the wagon with regard to the rest of the cover section; as well as second rail
sections, which, as the support rolls pass into a position corresponding to the closed
position and away from the fixed rails, are aligned with the fixed run rails in their
openings and thus form a uniform running surface for the support rolls. Switching
the walls from the transfer position to the closed position involves essentially inversed
actions; as the first rail sections are fixed to a pivoted axle, which is placed in
such a position with regard to the run rails, that a predetermined rotation of the
axle males the first rail sections move to the fixed run rails and back again; the
axis of rotation of the pivoted axle being below the fixed run rail in the vertical
plane determined by the run rail or at the most spaced from this towards the axis
of the wagon, this distance being essentially smaller than the fixing distance of
the first rail section from the axis of rotation; the switch of the cover sections
from the closed position to the transfer position and back again being produced by
a corresponding change of the position of the rail sections by this switch mechanism.
[0002] More specifically, the invention relates to a goods wagon, comprising typically two
identical cover sections successively in the longitudinal direction of the wagon.
In this case, a normal requirement is that each cover section be removable in the
longitudinal direction of the wagon to the second cover section and inversely. The
most common way of arranging this is to prodvide a longitudinal hinge in the roof
of the cover section, so that the roofs and walls of one cover section can be swung
outwards and upwards. As the cover section is slightly raised at the same time, its
inner dimensions will reach on top of the stationary second cover section. After the
above operation, one cover section is normally pushed on top of the second cover section
by means of run rail-roll means disposed in various ways on the sides of the wagon.
[0003] It is not very easy to achieve a satisfactory run rail-roll means. It is conceivable
that construction elements of the same kind as in the slide doors of vehicles are
used as a run rail-roll means. However, this is not possible because slide doors need
to move only in one direction upwards, allowing a very simple and solid rail arrangement,
whereas the cover section of a railway wagon should move sideways as well as upwards
at its lower edge, the distance of motion being markedly longer than in slide doors.
The known design of slide doors, such as e.g. the one of the GB patent specification
2 104 021, is not usable as such, since, when implemented in the cover section of
a railway wagon, it results in a weal construction, both because of the excessive
protrusion of the run rail supports and the great unsupported length of the construction
element forming the rails.
[0004] The US patent specification 4 341 163 discloses a construction that is inverse to
general practice, in other words with rails for moving the cover section as an integral
part of the cover section and rolls placed in the wagon frame via gear racks, the
cover section moving when these are actuated. This solution apparently works as such,
but it requires the use of a profile especially made for this purpose, involving high
costs. Another production technique would result in an even more expensive construction.
The combined gear-pinion rack is also relatively complicated and expensive.
[0005] However, it is doubful whether these solutions could be implemented to move the entire
cover section, given that two rail branches, even in mutually inversed positions,
should form extensions of each other, for the rolls to roll from the moved cover section
onto unturned rail sections at the unmoved cover section. This is difficult to achieve
in a reliable manner.
[0006] The FR patent specification 1 451 558 describes a construction corresponding somewhat
to the ones above, in which a support rail in the zone of the removable cover section
is turned to the support rail in the stationary cover section, allowing a rail of
the length of the total wagon for the pushing of the cover section. This solution
also has the drawback of a very complicated gear construction and also of rails projecting
from the cover section, which broaden the entire design and reduce the useful space.
[0007] The DE patent specification 3 312 001 presents a design, in which the rolls are solidly
mounted onto bearings in the cover section and the wagon frame has solid run rails
extending over the total length of the wagon. By appropriate dimensioning of these
rails, they can be connected to the bottom frame of the wagon, whereby they do not
increase the width or reduce the useful space of the wagon significantly. When the
cover section is to be raised into the switch position, the rolls, which in this closed
position are inside and below the rails, have to be lifted onto the rails. Since the
rolls have to be grooved rolls, i.e. provided with flanges, the fitting on the rails
requires an opening in the rail matching the flange of the groove. Then again, such
openings are not allowed in rails, since the cover section must be easily pushed by
hand, and when the wheel hits such an opening it cannot be removed by hand any more.
For this purpose an auxiliary rail is provided in the area of the roll of the cover
section, which moves along with the cover section against a second roll in the wagon
frame, this preventing the roll in the cover section from dropping into the recess.
According to the specification, this second roll is also used for lifting the cover
section into the switch position, whereby the second roll swings the cover section
upwards and outwards from the axuliary rail at the same time as the flange of the
roll in the cover section passes the slot in the run rail. This design involves the
particular drawback that the auxiliary rail, which can be only slightly longer than
the slotted zone in the run rail, must be very carefully positioned in the rolls in
the frame. This is usually not the case in reality, but even slight construction distortions,
e.g. under temperature variations, result in the auxiliary rail not being correctly
positioned. Consequently, the cover section is not removable at all, but a considerable
force has to be applied to turn the elements into their right positions.
[0008] According to the FI Patent Application 862324, the problem discussed above is solved
by turning the cover section into the switch position from grooved rolls mounted onto
bearings in the cover section by means of auxiliary rails, the auxiliary rail settling
into the opening of the rail stationary in the wagon frame. This opening is needed
for bringing the roll into its position, as in the specification discussed above.
According to the specification, the rolls also comprise an external cylindrical additional
bearing surface, which is intended to roll by the cover section in its closed position
in the area of the matching cavities on the auxiliary rails passing by these. This
solution is otherwise effective, but here also a small recess has to be made in the
auxiliary rail to match the cavity of the run rail. This is due to the fact that the
cylindrical additional bearing portion must be moved at least horizontally to the
rail or possibly upwards obliquely to the rail, whereby the upper surface of the rail
cannot be exactly aligned with the roll surface. Hence, the solution of this specification
involves problems in moving the cover section, as the cylindrical additional bearing
surface sinks into the recess of the auxiliary rail, and the cover section is very
difficult to get into motion again by hand.
[0009] The problems described above have been solved by the design in the FI patent specification
81310. The patent specification describes as main advantage of the switch mechanism
of the type described at the beginning of the application that the cover section can
always be safely opened and moved in the longitudinal direction of the wagon by hand
force without the occurence of any discontinuity due to the structure. It has now
been observed in practical implementation that the cover switch mechanism according
to the above patent does not always work satisfactorily, mainly because of human errors.
Problems occur in two respects. Firstly, the service personnel does not always turn
the switch mechanism into its extreme position by carefully turning the hand wheel,
but leave it in its intermediate position after the switch. In this case, the other
rail sections do not coincide exactly with the opening of the solid run rail, resulting
in the cover being jammed in the second rail section when it is being moved. The second
problem is caused by the truck that is loading the wagon, which incidentally hits
the wagon sides. The run rail is damaged, which is not especially harmful as such,
but damages affecting the operation of the mechanism will arise also at the transfer
points of the run rails and in the first and second rail sections.
[0010] The purpose of the invention is thus to achieve a switch mechanism for the cover
section, in which rolls mounted onto bearings in the cover section can roll at any
point of the wagon length along a continuous straight run rail and in which the point
of contact between the rolls and the rail remains at least substantially in the same
planar zone perpendicular to the axis of the roll, and thus the force required by
the transfer of the cover sections is kept low. The purpose of the invention is also
such a design, which always provides a sufficiently exact planar zone for the rolls,
even if the switch mechanism would be operated carelessly or wrong, and in which the
rail sections are kept sufficiently undamaged during the loading operation. A further
purpose of the invention is a construction, in which no point of the moving cover
section, e.g. the support roll, has to move in the width direction of the wagon with
regard to the other surface, i.e. in a direction angular to any of its butting faces,
and thus the opening forces of the cover sections are also kept low.
[0011] The design according to the invention achieves a crucial improvement of the inconvenients
described above and fulfills the objects defined above. In order to achieve this,
the construction according to the invention is characterized by the features presented
in the characterizing part of claim 1.
[0012] One could consider the main advantage of the invention that the cover sections can
always be safely opened and moved in the longitudinal direction of the wagon by hand
force without the occurence of any discontinuity due to the construction. The invention
also has the advantage of a simple construction, and thus of a safe operation and
also of low production costs.
[0013] The invention is explained in detail below with reference to the enclosed drawings.
[0014] Figure 1 shows a preferred embodiment of a construction according to the invention
viewed in the longitudinal direction C of a goods wagon with the cover section lifted
into the switch position.
[0015] Figure 2 shows the solution of figure 1 viewed in the transverse direction B of the
goods wagon.
[0016] Figure 3 shows the construction of figures 1 viewed in the longitudinal direction
C of a goods wagon, with the cover section lowered into the closing position.
[0017] Figure 4 shows the same construction in the closing position of figure 3 viewed in
the transverse direction B of a goods wagon.
[0018] Figure 5 shows a second preferred embodiment of the construction according to the
invention in the same projection as figure 3.
[0019] Figure 6 shows the embodiment of figure 5 viewed in the transverse direction B of
a goods wagon.
[0020] Figure 7 is a general view of a wagon with a removable cover having the design according
to the invention.
[0021] In figure 1 the cover section is generally marked with a full line and reference
1 in the switch position. Figure 3 shows the components of figure 3 with full lines
in positions corresponding to the closed position of the cover section 1 and the positions
of the components with dotted lines when the cover section 1 is in the switch position.
The construction firstly comprises longitudinal stationary run rails 3 connected to
the wagon frame 2 and passing on either side of it. Rolls 4 mounted on bearings in
the cover section 1 run along these rails 3, and there are typically four or some
other even number of these rolls, at least one in essentially each corner. When the
cover section is in the switch position, as indicated with dotted lines in figure
3 and figure 1, the rolls 4 may roll on the rails 3 along the sides of the wagon,
allowing the cover section to be pushed in the longitudinal direction of the wagon.
The run rails 3 are placed in the wagon beneath the loading platform 20 in the wagon
frame at such distances from each other that the rail and its support construction
are within the outer surface of the closed cover sections, i.e. line 5 in figure 1.
Thus, the rail construction does not increase the outer dimensions of the wagon.
[0022] When the cover section 1 is in its closed position, as indicated with a full line
in figure 3 and figure 5 for the two cover sections 1, the lower edges of the cover
section with their rolls 4 are situated between the run rails 3, in other words, when
seen from outside the wagon, within the rails and below the rails. Thus, the cover
section is tightly closed against the loading platform and the ends of the wagon and
against each other.
[0023] When one wishes to lift the cover section from the closed position to the switch
position, this is done by means of the switch mechanism 6. Such a switch mechanism
is typically provided at each roll of the cover section in its closing position. The
switch mechanism 6 consists of a pivoted axle 7 in the direction of the rails 3, which
is mounted on bearings to rotate with regard to the wagon frame 2. On the axle 7,
a rail section 13 parallel with the axis and thus with the run rail 3 is fixed at
a distance R from the axis 8 of the axle 7. The length P of this rail section is exactly
that much shorter than the length L of the opening 9 in the rail section 3 that the
rail section 13 barely fits into the said opening 9. When the cover section 1 is in
its closed position, the rail section 13 is beneath the rolls 4 inside and under the
run rails 3. In this step, the rolls 4 and the cover section 1 do not actually bear
on the rail sections 13, but the cover section bears on the wagon frame in order to
provide a tight sealing, as described above.
[0024] When one wishes to move the cover section from the closed position to the moving
position, the pivoted axle 7 is rotated, and then the rail section 13 bears on the
lower side of each roll 4 and during the continued rotation lifts the cover sections
via the rolls to rise and spread out in the switch position. The rising and spreading
of the cover section is an ordinary motion as such. The distance R between the axis
8 and the rail section 13 and the position of the axis 8 of the axle are selected
such that the distance of motion and the direction are great enough to produce the
transfer of the cover section 1 outwards and upwards at the same time, from the closing
position into the switch position, and to bring the rail section 13 as an extension
of the run rail 3 in the slot 9 as the roll 4 is in a position corresponding to the
closed position. The distance between the run rail 3 and the axis 8 is of course the
presently mentioned distance R and the pivoted axle 7 and its axis 8 are advantageously
vertically almost beneath the run rail 3, in the figures over a measure S towards
the axis of the wagon from the vertical plane determined by the rail 3. The measure
S is essentially smaller than the distance R. In principle, the measure S may be zero,
whereby the axis 8 is exactly beneath the run rail 3 in the vertical plane, provided
that the pivoted axle 7 and the related elements do not extend beyond the line 5.
Hence each run rail 3 and rail section 13 form a continuous rail, along which the
rolls 4 can roll freely by the cover section brought into its switch position.
[0025] When the cover section is in its closed position and the rolls 4 are inside the run
rails 3 and the rail section 13 is beneath the rolls 4, a rail section 23 is situtated
in each slot 9 and is aligned with the corresponding run rail 3 so that a continuous
rail is formed, along which the rolls 4 of the second cover section can roll by the
first cover section which is in its closed position.
[0026] The rail sections 13 are connected to the pivoted axle 7 by an appropriately shaped
bar or plate or a corresponding support member 10. According to the invention, second
rail sections 23 are disposed in the at least essentially vertical plane V, which
is aligned with the stationary run rails 3, to move up and down. The upper position
Y of the second rail section 23 then corresponds to the closed position of the walls
and the lower position A corresponds to the switch position of the walls 1. These
second rail sections are lifted and lowered into their upper and lower position by
a mechanism, which is generally marked by reference 18 and which is preferably connected
to co-operate with the said switch mechanism 6 of the cover section. The said vertical
plane V is not necessarily exactly vertical but may be inclined in a small angle with
regard to this in a not-represented manner, however a vertical position is advantageous.
In this connection, the concept vertical denotes an at least essentially vertical
direction. In principle, the mechanism 18 lifting and lowering the second rail sections
does not necessarily have to be connected to the switch mechanism 6 of the cover section,
but these rail sections could be operated by different actuators, which, however would
involve a great risk of operating errors. The upper edge 19 of the second rail sections
19 have an upper face shaped for instance in the same way as the solid run rails 3
and its upper position Y has been dimensioned at a height such that the upper edge
19 is aligned with the upper face of the run rails 3, thus forming a continuous butting
face for the rolls 4. The length P of the second rail sections is equal to that of
the first rail sections, whereby the second rail sections also barely fit into the
opening 9 of the solid run rails 3.
[0027] According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the second rail sections 23
are at least mainly plate-like bodies, whose motion in the vertical plane V is controlled
e.g. by two fixed guides 16 and 17, placed near the outer surfaces of the rail section
23 in the direction of the plate or against these surfaces so that the plate-like
second rail section 23 glides between these bodies 16 and 17 while preserving its
correct direction. These guides 16 and 17 are solidly fixed to the wagon frame 2.
The lower edge 14 and 15 of the second rail section 23 extends to the vicinity of
the circumference of the pivot axle 7. A lever protrusion, a cam, a crank or similar
has been designed as a lifting and lowering mechanism stationary on the circumference
of the pivoted axle 7. In the embodiment of the figures, there are two lever protrusions
11, 12, which both extend from the circumference of the pivot axle 7 beneath the lower
edge of the second rail section.
[0028] In this case, the operation of the lifting and lowering mechanism 18 is the following.
When the pivoted axle 7 is turned counter-clockwise, i.e. in the direction 22 of figure
3, in the case of figure 1, in which the second rail section 23 is in its lower position
A, the first lever protrusion 11 bears on the first lower edge 14 of the rail section,
as shown in figure 1, and when the rotating motion 22 is carried on, the first lever
protrusion lifts the rail section upwards. After a given rotation, the second lever
protrusion 12 bears on the second lower edge 15 of the rail section and, when the
rotating motions 22 go on, starts lifting the rail section 23 further upwards, until
the second rail section 23 is in its upper position Y, as shown in figure 3. In this
case, the pivoted axle 7 and its lever protrusions 11, 12 act as a kind of gear and
the second rail section 23 with its step-wise lower edges 14, 15 acts as a matching
cogged rail in order to lift and lower the second rail sections at the same time as
the first rails sections 13 attached on the arm 10 of the pivoted axle 7 move the
cover section 1 into its closed or its switch position. It is obvious that an inverse
operation, rotating the pivoted axle 7 clockwise, brings the second rail sections
from their upper position Y to their lower position A and the first rail sections
repsectively lift the cover section from its closed position to its switch position.
It is also obvious that the rotating direction described is reversed on the opposite
side of the wagon and also depends on the viewing direction. There may obviously be
either only one or more, as three or four lever protrusions, unlike the present embodiment.
The second rail section 23 has respectively fewer or more lower edges, which can be
step-wise in the direction of the axis of rotation 8 of the pivoted axle and thus
in the direction C of the run rails 3 or stepwise in a direction B perpendicular to
this, in addition to the stepwise arrangement shown in figures 2 and 4. In case openings
are provided in the second rail section, these lower edges are naturally upper faces
of the openings.
[0029] Among the guides controlling the up and down movements of the second rail section
23, the outer guide 17 is now easily designed as a construction protecting the whole
mechanism and the rail sections 13 and 23. If the upper edge 21 of the outer guide
17 is extended to the area of the run rails 3 or to its vicinity and even to the level
of the upper face of the run rail 3, or slightly above this, the first rail sections
13 in the opened area of the wagon and the joints between these and the run rails
3 are absolutely safely protected against chocks during the loading. The second rail
section 23 is also very well protected behind the outer guide 17. Although the upper
edge 21 of the outer guide 17 would be extended only to the height of the flanges
of the rolls 4, as presented in figures 1 and 3, it still provides a most efficient
protection for the first rail section 13 by preventing a force in essentially the
transverse direction of the wagon from hitting this. Also in this case, the second
rail sections 23 are well protected behind the outer guide 17 as shown in figures
1 and 3.
[0030] As shown in the preferred embodiment described above, the lever protrusions 11, 12
are situated essentially on the opposite side of the pivoted axle 7 with regard to
the support member 10 connecting the first rail section 13 with the pivoted axle.
An exact positioning naturally depends on the design of the construction elements
and their relative mutual positions.
[0031] If the pivoted axle 7 is fairly exactly in the plane V determined by the second rail
section 23, a simple cam formed around the pivot axle can also be used, whereby a
so-called camshaft is formed to lift and lower the second rail section as the pivot
axle is being turned. It is also possible to form a crank in the pivoted axle 7 and
to connect it with the second rail section 23 by an arm articulated in both of these,
thus producing a construction analogue with the crank machinery known from motors.
However, the latter solution is too expensive for such a purpose of use, although
it has the advantage of a mechanically controlled sinking of the rail section 23 into
its lower position A. Similar mechanisms of other kinds are also conceivable. Regardless
of the mechanism is a lever protrusion or a crank, its operation prerequisits that
its operative length L, which is the distance to the articulation point of the crank
or the contact point of the lever protrusion, in other words the lower edge of the
second rail section 14, 15 from the axis of revolution 8 of the pivot axle, is equal
to the distance S mentioned above or slightly greater than this. In the case of a
cam, the operative deviation of the cam from the minimum thickness of the pivot axle
7 must be at least essentially equal to the lifting required for the second rail section
23.
[0032] By disposing, in the case of a cam or a crank, the upper position Y of the second
rail section 23 to correspond at least essentially to the upper dead point, and especially
in the case of a cam, by giving the peak of the cam an appropriate design, the construction
is made very insensitive to operation errors. With regard to a cam, this is easy to
understand when its peal is given a relatively flat and broad shape, whereby the second
rail section 23 and its upper edge 19 are at least practically retained at the run
rails 3 although the pivot axle 7 would be slightly turned in a deflection angle corresponding
to the peak area of the cam. In this situation, the rail section 23 is in its right
position although the pivot axle 7 would not be turned sufficiently clockwise when
closing the cover section 1 in order to obtain a play 24 between the first rail section
13 and the roll 4 shown in figure 3. In fact, the cover section is closed even without
this play 24, as the pivot axle has not been turned in the direction 22 of its extreme
position by mistake, but also in this case the upper edge 19 of the second rail section
must be correctly positioned, and this is achieved by the invention. In the case of
a lever protrusion, the corresponding operation is provided by giving the outer portion
of the surface of the lever protrusion, or if there are more of them, of the last
lever protrusion 12 in the rotation direction 22 from the pivot axle which lifts the
rail section into its upper position, which bears on the lower edge of the rail section,
in this case the second lower edge 15, such a curved shape that the contact point
between this and the lower edge of the second rail section remains at least essentially
stationary during the final part of the rotative motion of the pivot axle in the direction
22. Thus, the surface of the lever protrusion 12 bearing on the edge 15 is an evolving
surface, the design of which obviously depends on the mutual positioning of the components
and on the other dimensions. Such a surface shape can however always be defined.
[0033] In the preferred embodiment described above the second rail sections 23 move from
their upper position Y into their lower position A under the effect of gravity. The
downwards motion may be enhanced by an appropriate auxiliary spring, which presses
the second rail section in its lower position A when released and the lifting from
the lower position into the upper position Y being effected against this auxiliary
spring. However, the motion of the second rail sections towards the lower position
may also be mechanically controlled by adding lever protrusions 25 and 26 protruding
solidly from the pivoted axle 7, a cam or similar to the lifting and lowering mechanism
18. In this case, the second rail section is provided with openings, protrusions 27,
28 or steps at the pivoted axle 7, the lever protrusions or similar bearing on the
surface of these in order to lower the second rail sections from the upper position
into the lower position. This surface is an upper surface in the case of protrusions
and steps and the lower side of the opening in the case of openings, i.e. the respective
opposite surface compared to the surface used for the lifting. Such a construction
detail is presented in figures 5 and 6, in which there are two lever protrusions and
protrusions of the second rail section. The lowering mechanism operates as follows.
In figures 5 and 6, the second rail sections are in their upper position Y, in which
the third lever protrusions 25 bear on the upper face of the first protrusions 27
of the rail sections as is clearly shown in figure 6. As the pivoted axle turns clockwise,,
i.e. in the direction 29, the lever protrusions pull the second rail section 23 downwards
with the intermediation of the protrusions of the rail section. After a given swing
angle, fourth lever protrusions 26 bear on the upper face of the second protrusions
28 of the rail section and carry on the move of the second rail section 23 downwards
as the rotative motion 29 goes on until the second rail section 23 is in its lower
position A. These lever protrusions 25, 26 prevent an involontary upwards movement
of the second rail section. It should be particularly noted that the third lever protrusions
performing the lowering of the rail section and the first lever protrusions 11 performing
its lifting are opposite edges of the same protrusions, i.e. the lower edges and the
upper edges respectively. Other lifting and lowering lever protrusions can be combined
accordingly. Exactly as above, a camshaft can be implemented for the lowering by using
e.g. a double-cam shaft and a second fork-like rail section extending around these
on the upper and the lower side. The protrusions, steps or openings of the second
rail section may, as the corresponding lifting members, extend either in the direction
of the axis of rotation 8 or perpendicularly to this. In addition, the adjusting member
30, very schematically represented in the embodiment of figure 5, such as an adjusting
screw, is intended to set the relative position of the elements of the mechanism on
the pivoted axle and the upper edge 19 of the second rail sections particularly during
the assembling of the wagon, but also during the use.
[0034] The invention is not limited to the embodiments described here, but other shapes,
dimensions and various combinations of the basic design are easily conceivable.
1. A construction of covered railways wagons, in which at least one cover section is
formed of walls turning with regard to each other, which for partial opening of the
wagon can be lifted and removed from each other by their lower edges into a switch
position; the wagon comprising first rail sections (13), which bearing on the lower
surface of support rolls (4) mounted onto bearings in the cover section, lift the
support rolls from a position corresponding to the closed position of the walls onto
fixed run rails (3) in the wagon frame, whereby second rail sections are removed to
the side and the first rail sections (13) are aligned with these stationary run rails
in their openings (9) thus forming a continuous running surface for the support rolls,
along which the support rolls can roll, thus enabling to move the cover section in
the longitudinal direction of the wagon with regard to the rest of the cover section;
and second rail sections (23), which, as the support rolls move into a position corresponding
to the closed position away from the stationary rails (3), are aligned with the stationary
run rails (3) in their openings (9) and thus form a continuous running surface for
the support rolls, the switch of the walls from the switch position to the closed
position involving essentially inverse actions; as the first rail sections (13) are
fixed to the pivoted axle (7) which is disposed in such a position with regard to
the run rails (3) that the predetermined rotation of the pivoted axle makes the first
rail sections (13) move to the stationary run rails and back; as the axis of rotation
(8) of the pivoted axle (7) is beneath the solid run rail (3) in the vertical plane
determined by the run rail or maximally at a distance (S) from this towards the axis
of the wagon, the said distance (S) being essentially smaller than the fixing distance
(R) of the first rail section (13) from the axis of rotation (8); and the switch of
the cover sections from their closed position to their moving position and back being
carried out by a corresponding position switch of the rail sections (13) by means
of the switch mechanism (6), characterized in that the second rail sections (23) are disposed to move up and down in the vertical
plane (V) aligned with the solid run rails (3), whereby the upper position (Y) corresponds
to the closed position of the walls and the lower position (A) corresponds to the
switch position and in that the mechanism (18) lifting and lowering the second rail
sections is connected to cooperate with the said switch mechanism (6) of the cover
section.
2. A construction according to claim 1, characterized in that the mechanism (18) lifting and lowering the second rails sections is a lever
protrusion, a cam, a crank or similar (11, 12) stationary in the pivoted axle (7),
that the second rail sections (23) are at least essentially vertical plate-like bodies,
whose upper edge (19) is shaped as a rail, the lifting and lowering mechanism (18)
bearing on their lower edge (14, 15) or a similar surface for the lifting from the
lower position (A) into the upper position (Y) and for the lowering.
3. A construction according to claim 2, characterized in that the operative length (L) of the lever protrusion, the crank or similar (11,
12) from the axis of rotation (8) of the pivoted axle (7) to the lower edge (14, 15)
of the second rail section (23) is equal to the said distance (S) or somewhat greater
than this and that the lever protrusion, the crank or similar points in another direction
than the pivoted axle and advantageously in an essentially opposite direction than
the support member (10) connecting the first rail sections (13) with the pivoted axle
(7).
4. A construction according to claim 2, characterized in that the operative deviation of the cam from the minimum thickness of the pivoted
axle is equal to the lifting required for the second rail section (23).
5. A construction according to claim 1, characterized in that the plate-like second rail sections (23) are controlled to move in an up
and down direction by twovertical guide members (16, 17) disposed immediately on either
side of it and in that the guide member placed on the outer side (17) of the wagon
extends upwards in the area of the run rails (3) or its vicinity to form an edge (21)
protecting these and the second rail sections (23) during the loading.
6. A construction according to claim 2 or 3, characterized in that there are two or more successive lever protrusions or similar in the circumferential
direction of the pivoted axle (7) and that there are respectively two or more openings
or steps (14 and 15) at the lower edge of the plate-like second rail section (23),
on which each successive lever protrusion, cam or crank bears successively in order
to yield a lifting and lowering mechanism (18) of a gear-pinion rack type.
7. A construction according to claim 2, 3, 4 or 6, characterized in that at least the outer portion of the surface of the lever protrusion, or of
the last lever protrusion (12) in the rotation direction (22) from the pivoted axle
which lifts the rail section into its upper position (Y), which bears on the lower
edge (15) of the second rail section (23), or respectively the surface forming the
upper dead point of the cam, has such a curved shape that the contact point between
this and the lower edge of the second rail section remains at least essentially stationary
during the end of the rotation of the pivoted axle (7) in the said direction (22)
in order to retain the upper edge (19) of the second rail section while the pivoted
axle performs this deflection angle.
8. A construction according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the mechanism (18) which lifts and lowers the second rail sections (23) comprises
a lever protrusion (25, 26), a cam or similar which is stationary in the pivoted axle
(7), and the second rail sections comprise openings, protrusions (27, 28) or steps,
the said lever protrusion, cam or similar bearing on the surface of these in order
to lower the second rail sections from their upper position (Y) into their lower position
(A).