Train Coupler Explained: Scharfenberg/Schaku Coupler

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024

Комментарии • 73

  • @captainchaos3667
    @captainchaos3667 Год назад +4

    Always exciting when I'm sitting in a stationary train with the doors open and another segment is coupled. It gives quite the jolt. They don't mess about.

    • @memediatek
      @memediatek Год назад

      Here in the UK they close the doors when coupling trains. When trains are coupled the doors will be opened on the incoming train, closed again, trains coupled, and then doors opened one more time before departure

    • @captainchaos3667
      @captainchaos3667 Год назад

      @@memediatek They are probably _supposed_ to do that here as well...

  • @gerardjagroo
    @gerardjagroo Год назад +15

    I never thought you would actually show an animation of how the coupling worked! 😊
    You just earned a new subscriber! 😊

  • @nintendowii2735
    @nintendowii2735 2 года назад +12

    Great video, learned a lot! If all of your content is like this I bet your channel will grow quickly!

    • @RailAcademy
      @RailAcademy  2 года назад +2

      Thanks a lot Liam. It means a lot. I do try to keep them fairly technical but that also then takes more time to research on the topic.

  • @hannesluts
    @hannesluts Год назад +8

    Great work - really well described and illustrated!

  • @randlofs
    @randlofs Год назад

    Great job! Now I know how a Scharfenberg coupler works. It was complicated when I first tried learning it (several years ago) and I just gave up, now I know thanks to your video!

  • @Sir_Mike
    @Sir_Mike Год назад +2

    Die gute alte Schafenbergkupplung:)
    Greetings from Germany ❤️

  • @pacificostudios
    @pacificostudios Год назад +4

    For those unfamiliar with the North American railroad system, brake air connections are assembled manually, but they disconnect automatically as the rail vehicles physically separate from each other. It's a simple system, but it keeps people out of the space between two railway vehicles until the vehicles have coupled. It may seem primitive, but it was invented in 1873, and mandated by federal law in 1893, when other countries relied on loose-coupling. During the transition period, the Janney coupler was made to also be compatible with the earlier "link-and-pin" coupler, which dictates some of its characteristics to this day.

    • @allancoelho6905
      @allancoelho6905 3 месяца назад +1

      Janney is also far more viable to freight due to load capacity, and simplicity of use too

  • @peterstolp7157
    @peterstolp7157 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the explanation.
    They are also in use in the Netherlands.
    But check your titles, the pictures for the electric couplings were switched.
    Peter

  • @aliuyar6365
    @aliuyar6365 Год назад +1

    Smart way of doing things. Bravo

  • @jonathanlanglois2742
    @jonathanlanglois2742 Год назад +2

    The new REM in Montreal is using a rather similar coupler, but the electrical connection is in a different location, under the cone and cup. Otherwise, I think that it is functionally almost identical.

  • @jix177
    @jix177 Год назад +1

    Good explanation. Thanks!

  • @hammadali5130
    @hammadali5130 2 года назад +2

    Your explanation is good!
    I hope ull grow more, kindly make videos on shunting please.

  • @mow4ncry
    @mow4ncry Год назад +1

    That's actually a modern version of the original which was the Tomlinson coupler, which dates to early 20th century used on the Key System in the East Bay area California USA for those not from the States

  • @arnomrnym6329
    @arnomrnym6329 Год назад +1

    Great explanation 👍🏾😎

  • @nofeardhon
    @nofeardhon Год назад +1

    Im working in Voith, great explaination.

  • @Bladebars
    @Bladebars Год назад +4

    good video, 1 small correction: your simulation video at 7mins in doesn't show a type 10 (two position) mechanism. This is more like type 12 (single position).

    • @RailAcademy
      @RailAcademy  Год назад +3

      Apologies for the mistake. Allow me to pin your comment so viewers can notice that.

  • @YourLocalHistorian
    @YourLocalHistorian Год назад +1

    Janney coupler is only one type of knuckle coupler and is not widely used in the US. The AAR (association of American railroads) type E, F, and FR are the most commonly used coupler in the United States. the term Janney coupler came about because it was the first patten for the knuckle type coupler. this information comes from former BNSF foreman and current engineer at the Colorado railroad museum who has his own RUclips channel where he goes by Hyce. but other than that, this is fantastic educational video.

    • @roadtrain_
      @roadtrain_ Год назад +1

      I read this comment, stumbled across 'Colorado railroad museum' and knew EXACTLY who you were talking about XD

    • @YourLocalHistorian
      @YourLocalHistorian Год назад

      @@roadtrain_ yeah

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Год назад

      tbf "Janney coupler" does seem to have become the generic name so it might just have been used because it's more recognizable.

  • @robertharmse85
    @robertharmse85 7 месяцев назад

    Very good explanation🙏

  • @MDCrabTank
    @MDCrabTank Год назад

    it seems that you have mixed pictures on connection lines, the one on left is connection lines on sides and on right top.

  • @Bassotronics
    @Bassotronics Год назад

    Thank you! 😘

  • @danieloehler2494
    @danieloehler2494 Год назад +2

    great job.
    In the EU they are planning to introduce automatic couplers. In Russia and the USA they are using them since over half a century. This is one of the reasons why freight transport is more common in the USA than in Europe.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Год назад +2

      The US has semi-automatic couplers in the form of Janney couplers that just automatically couple with each other but don't connect anything else nor can be automatically uncoupled. It's also more of the reverse, because rail freight is more common in the US broadly than in the EU there has been more standardization. The fact that it's also a single country has helped a lot as it's been easy politically to standardize. The biggest reason why rail freight is less common in the EU is because the shorter distances have made road freight a lot more viable and at the same times there are more waterways for shipping. A lot of this has also been a result of deliberate EU strategy which prioritized highways for a long time and generally neglected rail apart from passenger rail. All of this is set to change with the EU's new focus on sustainability where rail freight is set to take up a much larger share of freight and as part of that there has been a renewed focus on standardization, though as with all things this stuff takes decades with lots of negotiations.

  • @robertgebruers9519
    @robertgebruers9519 2 года назад +1

    Super video!

  • @Damien.D
    @Damien.D Год назад

    Never knew it was *that* old!
    Allways thought it was a new high tech stuff made for bullet trains.

  • @crabby7668
    @crabby7668 Год назад

    These are the couplers used on the channel tunnel shuttle trains.
    I think that your labels on the videos about the electrical couplers may be swapped over between on top and at the side. Just thought you might like to know. Nice explanation.

  • @danyb6113
    @danyb6113 Год назад

    Amazing content, the eplanation is easy to understand and the animation is so conclusive. Please work on your audio, and this channel will be perfect!😊

  • @damianfitzpatrick3465
    @damianfitzpatrick3465 9 месяцев назад

    If someone could perfect automatic coupling decoupling of tains so they could buggy out onto the track and attach to a moving train without stopping it would be game changer. Probably faster end to end than high speed rail in most cases.

    • @RailAcademy
      @RailAcademy  6 месяцев назад

      What do you think could be the benefits of that?

  • @kylehagertybanana
    @kylehagertybanana Год назад

    awesome!

  • @ysesq
    @ysesq Год назад +1

    how does it align vertically before coupling ?

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Год назад +2

      It's a big cone sticking out

  • @rogeriomonteiro760
    @rogeriomonteiro760 Год назад

    The future are the full automatic couplers like Scharfenberg or Dellner, that is similar.

  • @lowercherty
    @lowercherty Год назад +2

    What breaks first? Can it be changed in the dark in rain or snow by one or two people with simple tools?

    • @rogeriomonteiro760
      @rogeriomonteiro760 Год назад +1

      A Scharfenberg coupler break? You must be kidding.

    • @lowercherty
      @lowercherty Год назад

      @@rogeriomonteiro760 Put it on a 10,000 tonne train in the mountains and get back to me.

    • @georgacher7889
      @georgacher7889 Год назад +6

      @@lowercherty It may surprise you, but outside of the USA trains are actually used to transport also people, not only goods ;) Different use cases require different mechanisms. The Schaku is very well suited for public transport as it allows very quick (and reproducible) train assembly and splitting without any manual intervention. A lot of train schedules rely on that speed. Freight trains are a totally different story.

    • @rogeriomonteiro760
      @rogeriomonteiro760 Год назад +2

      @@lowercherty The trains in Europe are much shorter, but also faster and swifter than the american freight ones. That are big, but slow and dull. The Scharfenberg for european trains is perfect. It would be also better for passenger trains in the States, like Amtrak. So the idea of an 10000 tons train in Europe does not apply, it is just ridiculous .And in a mountain, even more, there are so many tunnels in Europe, that the maximum incline never surpasses 3%. Besides I am familiar to the Scharfenberg Coupling over more than 50 years and never saw that coupling break. I am sure that the Scharfenberg coupling type 140 or similar will replace the buffers and chain coupling in the european freight trains. So as the another types in the rest of the passanger trains ( the EMU and the DMU allready do). And the reason is simple, it is a complete automatic coupling.

    • @denzzlinga
      @denzzlinga Год назад

      Not really, if you break it, it´s fucked up. Need another engine to couple to the rear of the train and get it to the next station. But i never heared of a scharfenberg coupler breaking.
      10.000 ton trains should be possible, you just have to obey the maximum allowed pulling force on the coupler, so work with DPUs.

  • @vsiegel
    @vsiegel Год назад +1

    The German high speed trains name ICE is pronounced I C E, not ice like frozen water.

  • @dodo1opps
    @dodo1opps Год назад

    What's your thoughts on T20?

  • @SirHackaL0t.
    @SirHackaL0t. Год назад

    I was on a train that got delayed because a pidgeon got squashed in the electrical connection during a joining procedure. It made a bit of a mess.

    • @MrJimheeren
      @MrJimheeren Год назад

      Fucking flying rats. Always messing things up

    • @RailAcademy
      @RailAcademy  6 месяцев назад

      Ouch. These have a lot of force to crush anything to a blob of meat.

  • @6ft_2in_b_a_b_y28
    @6ft_2in_b_a_b_y28 Год назад

    What's thst protrusion beneath coupler called?

  • @UnitSe7en
    @UnitSe7en Год назад +1

    _How_ many trains are coupled and uncoupled every day around the world? Hundreds you say? Wow, that's a lot!

  • @arthurrytis6010
    @arthurrytis6010 Год назад

    How about a Delner. I was trained on that . Never got my head round it in million years 😂😂😂

  • @Sacto1654
    @Sacto1654 Год назад

    Isn’t this the coupler used by JR East for certain E2, E3, E5, E6 and soon E8 Shinkansen train sets?

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Год назад +1

      Pretty much all modern emu uses them.

    • @StevenTsoi
      @StevenTsoi Год назад

      Japan uses a slightly different type call Shibata couplers.

    • @Angelthewolf
      @Angelthewolf 9 месяцев назад

      Almost all modern multiple units use them (speaking for europe)

  • @b43xoit
    @b43xoit Год назад

    I have seen what looks like this type in subways in the US.

  • @physiocrat7143
    @physiocrat7143 Год назад +1

    They don't work well at Brighton with its curved tracks. Video explains why these couplings do not help with ride stability.
    The combination of knuckle coupling and gangway plates under compression provides effective inter vehicular damping. The lack of this feature in the Mark 4 stock is one reason for the poor ride quality of this and more recent British trains. The long bellows style gangways also make matters worse. British rolling stock is typically 3 or 4 metres too long for the system which is presumably why pullman type gangways cannot be used.
    Until 1975 all British trains were fitted with retractable buffers and screw couplings at the outer ends of sets. Knuckle couplings would normally be used but could be swung downwards to reveal the regular hook. Everything could be coupled to everything else. Nowadays every type of rolling stock seems to be different from every other. We were once stuck in a Swedish forest in the middle of nowhere while the staff spent two hours trying to attach a freight diesel locomotive to a failed X2000 train. It is no way to equip a railway.

  • @lorenzoboyd6889
    @lorenzoboyd6889 Год назад

    Do these couplers connect trainline air?

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Год назад

      It's not part of the standard, but there is adons that can. Annoyingly several that is not intercompatible.

    • @diedampfbrasse98
      @diedampfbrasse98 Год назад

      the type 10 / 140 standards do connect air ... its the upper and lower opening on the centerline of the contact surface. You can see it in the ICE and TGV clips in this video. These are not addons, but regular standard coupler for trains. The coupler not havin it in the videos are either light rail/tram type or non-european implementations.

  • @RomanKuznetsovLameFrog
    @RomanKuznetsovLameFrog Год назад

    3:17 - where is russian system?

    • @laju
      @laju Год назад +1

      Willison / SA3.

  • @Uwe_Ludolf
    @Uwe_Ludolf Год назад

    I guess Schaku is short for Scharfenberg Kopplung. So Schaku coupling is double

  • @Cancun771
    @Cancun771 Год назад

    Shouldn't a rail nerd know how to pronounce ICE?

  • @DonnyHooterHoot
    @DonnyHooterHoot Год назад

    Rail. Yawn.

  • @lewiskelly14
    @lewiskelly14 Год назад

    Missing some details