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RARE OLD VINTAGE RAILROAD RAIL BASE TIE SOLE PLATE PATD MAY 23 16 1916 MICHIGAN

$ 68.66

Availability: 100 in stock
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  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days

    Description

    Selling a very old RARE OLD VINTAGE RAILROAD RAIL BASE TIE SOLE PLATE " PAT'D MAY 23 16 " 1916 MICHIGAN TRAIN
    This item will be a great addition to TRAIN COLLECTORS and OLD RAIL fans and RARE AND UNIQUE ITEM
    Collectors and VINTAGE Collectors and FUN STUFF Fans. Offered at BUY IT NOW or BEST OFFER!
    Cast with " PAT"D MAY 23 16 ". Has surface rust and wear and close to 100 years of character.
    Found this neat old treasure while metal detecting with my grandson on our property in Ada, Michigan.
    Was buried under one foot of dirt.
    Would make a great addition to a Train / Rail / Hardware collection. GREAT graphical appeal and Train / Locomotive theme.
    This OLD OLD base plate has great practical use and utility as a weight, doorstop, display and would look great enhancing a TRAIN or
    Antique collection.
    This old Rail Base Plate is in good condition for being close to 100 years old -
    see photos.
    This great old piece of Railroadiana needs a good home in a nice collection or museum. Would look great in a Man Cave, MOM Cave, Train Den,
    Home, Office or Museum.
    Feel free to make offer on this great old piece of Americana.
    We will always combine shipping when possible to package items together.
    Bid confident that we will ship this ole rail plate Fast and Safe.
    High resolution photos convey condition and details.
    If there are any questions, please contact us.
    Payment method is PayPal.
    Shipping & Handling costs are .95 for First Class Domestic.  Will ship Fast and Safe.
    Thank you
    Rail fastening system
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Elements of a baseplate based rail fastening system
    1. Screw for fixing plate to sleeper
    2. Elastomeric pad supporting rail
    3. Tension washer
    4. Rail clamp
    5. Tensioning bolt (nut not shown)
    6. Baseplate
    assembled example
    This article is about devices used to fasten rail to railroad ties (sleepers), for devices used to join lengths of rail see
    Fishplate
    "Rail spike" redirects here. For the Transformer, see
    Railspike
    .
    A
    rail fastening system
    is a means of fixing
    rails
    to
    railroad ties
    (United States) or sleepers (international). The terms
    rail anchors
    ,
    tie plates
    ,
    chairs
    and
    track fasteners
    are used to refer to parts or all of a rail fastening system. Various types of fastening have been used over the years.
    History and overview
    The earliest wooden rails were fixed to wooden sleepers by pegs through holes in the rail, or by nails. By the 18th century cast iron rails had come into use, and also had holes in the rail itself to allow them to be fixed to a support.
    [1]
    18th century developments such as the
    flanged rail
    and
    fish bellied rail
    also had holes in the rail itself; when stone block sleepers were used the nails were driven into a wooden block which had been inserted into a recess in the block. The first chair for a rail is thought to have been introduced in 1797 which attached to the rail on the vertical web via bolts.
    [2]
    By the 1820s the first shaped rolled rails had begun to be produced initially of a T shape which required a chair to hold them; the rails were held in position by iron wedges (which sometimes caused the rail to break when forced in) and later by wooden wedges, which became the standard.
    [3]
    In the 1830s
    Robert L. Stevens
    invented the flanged 'tee' rail (actually a distorted I beam), which had a flat bottom and required no chair, a similar design was the contemporary bridge rail (an inverted 'U' shaped with bottom flange and used on longitudinal sleepers); these rails were initially nailed directly to the sleeper.
    [4]
    In North American practice the flanged T rail became the standard, later being used with tie-plates. Elsewhere T rails were replaced by
    bull head rails
    of a rounded 'I' or 'figure-8' appearance which still required a supporting chair. Eventually the flanged T rail became commonplace on all the worlds railways, though differences in the fixing system still exist.
    Spikes and screws
    Rail spikes
    Rusted cut spikes
    (scale in inches)
    Dog spike
    A
    rail spike
    (also known as a
    cut spike
    or
    crampon
    ) is a large
    nail
    with an offset head that is used to secure rails and base plates to
    railroad ties
    in the track.
    Robert Livingston Stevens
    is credited with the invention of the railroad spike,
    [5]
    being first used in at least 1832.
    [6]
    The railroad spike was an invention which resulted from the state of industrialisation in the United States in the early 19th century: English mainline railways of that period used heavy and expensive cast iron chairs to secure T shaped rails; instead, Stevens added a supporting base to the T rail which could be fixed with a simple spike.
    [7]
    [8]
    In 1982, the spike was still the most common rail fastening in North America. Common sizes are from 9 to 10/16 inch square and ~5.5 to 6 inch long.
    [9]
    A rail spike is roughly chisel shaped and with a flat edged point; the spike is driven with the edge perpendicular to the grain, which gives greater resistance to loosening.
    [10]
    The main function is to keep the rail in gauge. When attaching tie plates the attachment is made as strong as possible, whereas when attaching a rail to tie or tie plate the spike is not normally required to provide a strong vertical force, allowing the rail some freedom of movement.
    [9]
    Originally spikes were driven into wooden sleepers by hammering them with a heavy hammer by hand. This manual work has been replaced by machines, commonly called "spike drivers" (A machine that removes spikes is called a "spike puller").
    [11]
    Splitting of the wood can be limited by pre-boring spike holes or adding steel bands around the wood.
    [12]
    For use in the
    United States
    three basic standards are described in the
    ASTM
    A65 standard, for different carbon steel contents.
    [13]
    The rail spike has entered American popular consciousness; the driving of the "
    Golden Spike
    " was a key point in North American development of the western seaboard. Railroad workers have been celebrated in song and verse.
    [14]
    A
    dog spike
    is functionally equivalent to a cut spike and is also square in horizontal section and of similar dimensions but has a pointed penetrating head, and the rail (or "plate holding") head has two lugs on either side (which aid spike removal) giving the impression of a dog's head.
    [15]
    Screw spikes
    Rusted screw spike
    Railway Tire-fonds
    A
    screw spike
    ,
    rail screw
    (or
    lag bolt
    ) is a large (~6 in or 152 mm length, slightly under 1 in or 25 mm) metal screw used to fix a tie plate or fasten rail. Screw spikes are fixed into a hole bored in the sleeper.
    [16]
    The screw spike has a higher cost to manufacture than the rail spike but has the advantage of greater fixing power; approximately twice that of a rail spike,
    [17]
    and can be used in combination with
    spring washers
    .
    [16]
    The screw spike was first introduced in 1860 in France (French
    tire-fond
    ), and became common in continental Europe.
    [18]
    A
    dog screw
    is a tradename variant of the screw spike.
    [19]
    Fang bolts
    Fang bolts
    which are also named rail anchor bolts, have also been used for fixing rails or chairs to sleepers; the fang bolt is a bolt inserted through a hole in the sleeper with a fanged nut that bites into the lower surface of the sleeper. For fastening flat-bottomed rails an upper-lipped washer can be used to grip the edge of the rail. They are more resistant to loosening by vibrations and movement of the rail.
    [20]
    They are thought more effective than spikes and screws and so are used in positions such as switch (point) tieplates,
    [21]
    and on sharp curves.
    [22]
    Spring spikes
    Spring spike fastener (German
    Oberbau Hf
    [23]
    )
    Spring spikes
    , (or
    elastic rail spikes
    [24]
    ) are used with flat-bottomed rail, baseplates and wooden sleepers; the spring spike holds the rail down and prevents tipping, and also secures the baseplate to the sleeper.
    [25]
    The
    Macbeth spike
    (trade name) is a two-pronged U-shaped
    staple
    -like spike bent so that it appears M-shaped when viewed from the side.
    [26]
    [27]
    Inverted J-shaped single pointed spikes have also been used.
    [28]
    Fixing equipment
    The
    spike maul
    , also known as a
    spiking hammer
    , is a type of sledgehammer with a long thin head which was originally used to drive spikes.
    [29]
    [30]
    Manual hole drilling and spike or screw insertion and removal have been replaced by semi-automated or automated machines, both pneumatic and hydraulic. Machines that remove spikes are called
    spike pullers
    .
    [31]
    [32]
    [33]
    Rail supports
    Chairs
    Cross section of early T rail, chair and key
    The earliest
    railway chairs
    , made of cast iron, were introduced around 1800 used to fix and support cast-iron rails at the ends;
    [2]
    they were also used to join the adjacent rails.
    [34]
    In the 1830s T-shaped (or
    single-flanged T parallel rail
    ) and I-shaped rails (
    double-flanged T parallel
    or
    bullhead rail
    ) rolled rails were introduced; both required cast-iron chairs to support them.
    [35]
    Originally, iron keys were used to wedge the rail into the vertical parallel jaws of the chair; these were superseded by entirely wooden keys.
    [35]
    The wooden keys were formed from oak, steam softened and then compressed with hydraulic presses and stored in a drying house; when inserted into the chair, exposure to the wet atmosphere would cause the key to expand, firmly holding the rail.
    [36]
    The wedge may be on the inside or outside of the rail (usually the outside).
    [37]
    Chairs have been fixed to the sleeper using wooden spikes (
    trenails
    ), screws, fang-bolts or spikes.
    [38]
    In most of the world, flat-bottomed rail and baseplates became the standard, however in Britain, bullhead rail-and-chairs remained in use until the middle of the twentieth century.
    [25]
    They are now largely obsolete but can still be found on
    London Underground
    and
    sidings
    .
    [
    where?
    ]
    [
    when?
    ]
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    Tie plates
    A
    tie plate
    ,
    baseplate
    or
    sole plate
    is a steel plate used on rail tracks between
    flanged T rail
    and the
    crossties
    . The tie plate increases bearing area and holds the rail to correct
    gauge
    . They are fastened to wooden ties by means of
    spikes
    or bolts through holes in the plate.
    The part of the plate under the rail base is tapered, setting the
    cant
    of the rail, an inward rotation from the vertical. The usual slope is one in forty ( 1.4 degrees ). The top surface of the plate has one or two shoulders that fit against the edges of the base of the rail. The double-shoulder type is currently used. Older single-shoulder types were adaptable for various rail widths, with the single shoulder positioned on the outside (field side) of the rails. Most plates are slightly wider on the field side, without which the plates tend to cut more into the outsides of the tie, reducing cant angle.
    Many railways use large
    wood screws
    , also called
    lag screws
    , to fasten the tie plates (or baseplates) to the railroad ties.
    Tie plates came into use around the year 1900, before which time flanged T rail was spiked directly to the ties.
    Clips
    A variety of different types of heavy-duty clips are used to fasten the rails to the underlying baseplate, one common one being the
    Pandrol
    fastener (Pandrol clip), named after its maker, which is shaped like a stubby paperclip.
    [39]
    Another one is the Vossloh Tension Clamp.
    [40]
    The newer Pandrol fastclip is applied at right angles to the rail. Because the clip is captive, it has to be installed at the time of manufacture of the concrete sleeper.
    Rail fastening types
    Rail spike with baseplate above the tie
    Track joint and chairs
    Pandrol
    'e-Clip' fastening
    Pandrol 'fastclip' fastening
    Tension clamp fastening
    Bolt clamped fastening
    Steel spring keyed rail in chair
    See also
    Permanent way
    and
    permanent way (history)
    , descriptions of the entire track system.
    References
    Jump up
    ^
    Origin and Development of the Railway Rail, G. P. Raidabaugh, pp.5-7
    ^
    Jump up to:
    a
    b
    Origin and Development of the Railway Rail, G. P. Raidabaugh, pp.8-9
    Jump up
    ^
    Origin and Development of the Railway Rail, G. P. Raidabaugh, pp.14-19
    Jump up
    ^
    Origin and Development of the Railway Rail, G. P. Raidabaugh, pp.19-24
    Jump up
    ^
    "October 18 - Today in Science History"
    .
    www.todayinsci.com
    . Robert Livingston Stevens.
    Jump up
    ^
    George Iles (1912).
    Leading American inventors
    . H. Holt and company, New York. p. 23.
    Jump up
    ^
    Origin and Development of the Railway Rail, G. P. Raidabaugh, p.20
    Jump up
    ^
    "The Rail Spike and The Locomotive"
    .
    chestofbooks.com
    . Scientific American.
    ^
    Jump up to:
    a
    b
    Railroad engineering, Volume 1, William Walter Hay, pp.582-3
    Jump up
    ^
    "railroad spikes"
    .
    www.sizes.com
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    Brian Solomon (2001).
    Railway maintenance: the men and machines that keep the railroads running
    . MBI Publishing Company. pp. 61, 64.
    ISBN
    9781610606684
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    Railroad engineering, Volume 1, William Walter Hay, p.455
    Jump up
    ^
    "ASTM A65 - 07"
    .
    www.astm.org
    . ASTM International (American Society for Testing and Materials).
    Jump up
    ^
    Norm Cohen; David Cohen (2000).
    Long steel rail: the railroad in American folksong
    . University of Illinois Press.
    ISBN
    9780252068812
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    Mundrey (2000).
    Railway Track Engineering
    . Tata McGraw-Hill. pp. 130–131.
    ISBN
    9780074637241
    .
    ^
    Jump up to:
    a
    b
    Railroad engineering, Volume 1, William Walter Hay, pp.585
    Jump up
    ^
    Orrock John Wilson (1918).
    "Railroad Structure and Estimates"
    . J. Wiley & Sons, New York. pp. 198–204.
    Jump up
    ^
    Railway Maintenance Engineering, William Sellew, pp.161-3
    Jump up
    ^
    AJAX - Dog Screw Railway Fasteners for Rail Tracks With Timber Sleepers
    ,
    www.railway-technology.com
    Jump up
    ^
    Railway Appliances, John Wolfe Barry, pp.53-54,73
    Jump up
    ^
    Mundrey (2000).
    Railway Track Engineering
    . Tata McGraw-Hill. pp. 156–7.
    ISBN
    9780074637241
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    William Hemingway Mills (1898).
    Railway Construction
    . Longmans, Green, and Co. pp. 224,
    also
    fig.331–334 (p.221).
    Jump up
    ^
    Wolfgang Schiemann (2002).
    Schienenverkehrstechnik: Grundlagen der Gleistrassierung
    . Teubner B.G. p. 283.
    ISBN
    3519003635
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    Clifford F. Bonnett (2005).
    Practical railway engineering
    . Imperial College Press. 5.10 Rail fastenings, Baseplates and Pads, p.65.
    ^
    Jump up to:
    a
    b
    Colin Craig.
    "THE MODERN PERMANENT WAY (Part 1)"
    . THE MANCHESTER MODEL RAILWAY SOCIETY.
    Jump up
    ^
    National Research Council (U.S.). Railroad Research Information Service; United States. Federal Railroad Administration (1973).
    Special bibliography: safety-related technology
    . National Academies. 032978 Spring Steel Rail Spikes
    (from Railway Gazette, Feb. 1948, Vol.88, pp.191-2)
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    Iain Ellis (2006).
    Ellis' British Railway Engineering Encyclopaedia
    . Lulu.com. Macbeth spike, p.211.
    ISBN
    9781847286437
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    Iain Ellis (2006).
    Ellis' British Railway Engineering Encyclopaedia
    . Lulu.com. Elastic Spike, p.114.
    ISBN
    9781847286437
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    Railway Maintenance Engineering, William Sellew, p.215-6
    Jump up
    ^
    Ron Fitch (2006).
    Australian Railwayman: From Cadet Engineer to Railways Commissioner
    . Rosenberg Publishing. p. 220.
    Jump up
    ^
    Brian Solomon (2001).
    Railway maintenance: the men and machines that keep the railroads running
    . MBI Publishing Company. pp. 59–62.
    ISBN
    9781610606684
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    "Workin' on the Railroad"
    .
    Popular Mechanics
    (Hearst Magazines)
    84
    (4): 20–27. October 1945.
    ISSN
    0032-4558
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    "Mechanised section gang now lays railroad ties"
    .
    Popular Science
    (Bonnier Corporation)
    168
    (2): 168–9. February 1956.
    ISSN
    0161-7370
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    Origin and Development of the Railway Rail, G. P. Raidabaugh, pp.11-12
    ^
    Jump up to:
    a
    b
    Daniel Kinnear Clark (1855).
    Railway machinery: a treatise on the mechanical engineering of railways: embracing the principles and construction of rolling and fixed plant; illustrated by a series of plates on a large scale, and by numerous engravings on wood, Volume 2
    . Blackie and Son. p. 280.
    Jump up
    ^
    Frederick Smeaton Williams (1852).
    Our Iron Roads: their history, construction and influences: With numerous illustrations
    . Ingram. pp. 199–200.
    Jump up
    ^
    Railway Appliances, John Wolfe Barry, pp.43-51
    Jump up
    ^
    Railway Appliances, John Wolfe Barry, pp.71
    Jump up
    ^
    "Pandrol - Pandrol - The future of rail fastenings"
    .
    www.pandrol.com
    .
    Jump up
    ^
    "vossloh-fastening-systems.com - Home"
    .
    www.vosslo-fastening-systems.de
    .
    Sources
    William Walter Hay (1982).
    Railroad engineering, Volume 1
    . John Wiley and Sons.
    ISBN
    9780471364009
    .
    William Sellew (1915).
    Railway Maintenance Engineering - With Notes on Construction
    . D. Van Nostrand Company.
    ISBN
    9781445591773
    .
    G. P. Raidabaugh (1915).
    Origin and Development of the Railway Rail: English and American Wood, Iron and Steel
    . Kohn & Pollock, Baltimore.
    ISBN
    9781408637654
    .
    John Wolfe Barry (1876).
    Railway Appliances
    . Longmans, Green and co. (reprint BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2008).
    ISBN
    9780559022982
    .
    Charles Lee Crandall; Fred Asa Barnes (1913).
    Railroad Construction
    . McGraw-Hill.
    Further reading
    Railway locomotives and cars, Volume 6
    . Simmons-Boardman Pub. Corp. 1838. From the American Journal of Science and Arts "Experiments on the adhesion of iron spikes of various forms, when driven into different specimins of timber"; by Walter B. Johnson, Professor of mechanics and natural philosophy in the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia , pp.357-360.