themole said:attachment=7]
The last picture is the means to attach a span wire to a brick building. Alyn
Known as "Rosettes" here and there are 3 still fixed to buildings in Ipswich town centre, if you know where to look, almost 50 years after the trolleybus wires were taken down on that stretch of road. They may actually be original tramway ones which were reused after the change to trolleybuses on that route in 1923!tramcar trev said:themole said:attachment=7]
The last picture is the means to attach a span wire to a brick building. Alyn
These are called " wall roses" in Sydney and there used to be 1000's of them on every brick building where the span wires were attached to. Now individually if you can find one they sell for AU$1000's each.... there was even a site where their locations could be given so that they could be "salvaged"..... and now Architects are not allowed to remove or even disturb them when redesigning uban areas where they still exist...
trammayo said:Hi Trev.
I presume you will be using trolley wheels for pick-up. Skid or sliding heads would wear quickly on twisted wire.
Yes trolley wheels it will be though skids would be ok if I made up a little graphite insert from piece of "lead" out of a soft carpenters pencil.....
Probably the wrong place to discuss the trolley poles thenselves but I'm hoping at this stage to modify some Bachmann ones and fit them with wheels....
themole said:![]()
Morning all, please keep the ideas flowing, here is my version which can handle bows, pantographs, and fixed trolley heads. The sides of the frog are the same hight as the inner guides. The frogs can be soldered up using brass and nickle silver. Alyn![]()
trammayo said:On the subject of Tramway "Catenary" - and I'll be excused of being pedantic here - most if not all 1st generation British tramways did not use catenary. It was mainly a railway thing. However the same cannot be said of modern systems.
British tramways - in fact virtually world-wide - used span wires or bracket arms to suspend the running wires. Continental practise introduced catenary as a more suitable suspension method for running (or contact) wires - especially for higher speeds and heavier currents (am I right here?).
I just wonder if Australia used similar nomenclature to describe overhead lines - like ears, pull-offs, frogs, segments, traction poles, section feeders, breakers, etc.
As an aside, despite metrification, the thread on hangers, etc, is still Whitworth (and on the continent too!) - that is of course on "traditional" type overhead.
Mick