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Bogie

A bogie (/ˈbɡi/ BOH-ghee) (or truck in North American English) is a chassis or framework that carries a wheelset, attached to a vehicle—a modular subassembly of wheels and axles. Bogies take various forms in various modes of transport. A bogie may remain normally attached (as on many railroad cars and semi-trailers) or be quickly detachable (as the dolly in a road train or in railway bogie exchange); it may contain a suspension within it (as most rail and trucking bogies do), or be solid and in turn be suspended (as most bogies of tracked vehicles are); it may be mounted on a swivel, as traditionally on a railway carriage or locomotive, additionally jointed and sprung (as in the landing gear of an airliner), or held in place by other means (centreless bogies).

A railway bogie

In Scotland, the term is used for a child’s (usually home-made) wooden cart.

While bogie is the preferred spelling and first-listed variant in various dictionaries,[1][2][3] bogey and bogy are also used.[1][2]

Railway

A bogie in the UK, or a railroad truck, wheel truck, or simply truck in North America, is a structure underneath a railway vehicle (wagon, coach or locomotive) to which axles (and, hence, wheels) are attached through bearings. In Indian English, bogie may also refer to an entire railway carriage.[4] In South Africa, the term bogie is often alternatively used to refer to a freight or goods wagon (shortened from bogie wagon).

 
The first rolling stock with a bogie, a locomotive built in 1832

The bogie was invented by John B. Jervis along with the 4-2-0 locomotive to support the smokebox on it in the early 1830s, but it didn't get accepted for decades. The first standard gauge British railway to build coaches with bogies, instead of rigidly mounted axles, was the Midland Railway in 1874.[5]

Purpose

 
Bogies allow the wheelsets to more closely follow the direction of the rails when travelling around a curve in the railroad
 
Displacements of a bogie

Bogies serve a number of purposes:[6]

  • Support of the rail vehicle body
  • Stability on both straight and curved track
  • Improve ride quality by absorbing vibration and minimizing the impact of centrifugal forces when the train runs on curves at high speed
  • Minimizing generation of track irregularities and rail abrasion

Usually, two bogies are fitted to each carriage, wagon or locomotive, one at each end. Another configuration is often used in articulated vehicles, which places the bogies (often Jacobs bogies) under the connection between the carriages or wagons.

Most bogies have two axles,[6] but some cars designed for heavy loads have more axles per bogie. Heavy-duty cars may have more than two bogies using span bolsters to equalize the load and connect the bogies to the cars.

Usually, the train floor is at a level above the bogies, but the floor of the car may be lower between bogies, such as for a bilevel rail car to increase interior space while staying within height restrictions, or in easy-access, stepless-entry, low-floor trains.

Components

 
A diagram of an American-style truck showing the names of its parts and showing the journal boxes to be integral parts of the side frame[7][8][9] The journal boxes house plain bearings

Key components of a bogie include:[6]

  • The bogie frame: This can be of inside frame type where the main frame and bearings are between the wheels, or (more commonly) of outside frame type where the main frame and bearings are outside the wheels.
  • Suspension to absorb shocks between the bogie frame and the rail vehicle body. Common types are coil springs, leaf springs and rubber airbags.
  • At least one wheelset, composed of an axle with bearings and a wheel at each end.
  • The bolster, the main crossmember, connected to the bogie frame through the secondary suspension. The railway car is supported at the pivot point on the bolster.
  • Axle box suspensions absorb shocks between the axle bearings and the bogie frame. The axle box suspension usually consists of a spring between the bogie frame and axle bearings to permit up-and-down movement, and sliders to prevent lateral movement. A more modern design uses solid rubber springs.
  • Brake equipment: Two main types are used: brake shoes that are pressed against the tread of the wheel, and disc brakes and pads.
  • In powered vehicles, some form of transmission, usually electrically powered traction motors with a single speed gearbox or a hydraulically powered torque converter.

The connections of the bogie with the rail vehicle allow a certain degree of rotational movement around a vertical axis pivot (bolster), with side bearers preventing excessive movement. More modern, bolsterless bogie designs omit these features, instead taking advantage of the sideways movement of the suspension to permit rotational movement.[6]

Locomotives

Diesel and electric

Modern diesel and electric locomotives are mounted on bogies. Those commonly used in the North America include Type A, Blomberg, HT-C and Flexicoil trucks.[10]

Steam

On a steam locomotive, the leading and trailing wheels may be mounted on bogies like pony trucks or Bissel bogies. Articulated locomotives (e.g. Fairlie, Garratt or Mallet locomotives) have power bogies similar to those on diesel and electric locomotives.

Rollbock

A rollbock is a specialized type of bogie that is inserted under the wheels of a rail wagon/car, usually to convert for another track gauge. Transporter wagons carry the same concept to the level of a flatcar specialized to take other cars as its load.

Archbar bogies

In archbar or diamond frame bogies, the side frames are fabricated rather than cast.

Tramway

Modern

 
Side view of a SEPTA K-Car bogie

Tram bogies are much simpler in design because of their axle load, and the tighter curves found on tramways mean tram bogies almost never have more than two axles. Furthermore, some tramways have steeper gradients and vertical, as well as horizontal, curves, which means tram bogies often need to pivot on the horizontal axis, as well.

Some articulated trams have bogies located under articulations, a setup referred to as a Jacobs bogie. Often, low-floor trams are fitted with nonpivoting bogies and many tramway enthusiasts see this as a retrograde step, as it leads to more wear of both track and wheels and also significantly reduces the speed at which a tram can round a curve.[11]

Historic

In the past, many different types of bogie (truck) have been used under tramcars (e.g. Brill, Peckham, maximum traction). A maximum traction truck has one driving axle with large wheels and one nondriving axle with smaller wheels. The bogie pivot is located off-centre, so more than half the weight rests on the driving axle.

Hybrid systems

 
Mockup of the pneumatic bogie system of an MP 89 carriage used on the Meteor metro, showing the two special wheelsets[12]

The retractable stadium roof on Toronto's Rogers Centre used modified off-the-shelf train bogies on a circular rail. The system was chosen for its proven reliability.

Rubber-tyred metro trains use a specialised version of railway bogies. Special flanged steel wheels are behind the rubber-tired running wheels, with additional horizontal guide wheels in front of and behind the running wheels, as well. The unusually large flanges on the steel wheels guide the bogie through standard railroad switches, and in addition keep the train from derailing in case the tires deflate.[12]

Variable gauge axles

To overcome breaks of gauge some bogies are being fitted with variable gauge axles (VGA) so that they can operate on two different gauges. These include the SUW 2000 system from ZNTK Poznań.

Cleminson system

The Cleminson system is not a true bogie, but serves a similar purpose. It was based on a patent of 1883 by James Cleminson,[13] and was once popular on narrow-gauge rolling stock, e.g. on the Isle of Man and Manx Northern Railways. The vehicle would have three axles and the outer two could pivot to adapt to curvature of the track. The pivoting was controlled by levers attached to the third (centre) axle, which could slide sideways.[14]

Tracked vehicles

Some tanks and other tracked vehicles have bogies as external suspension components (see armoured fighting vehicle suspension). This type of bogie usually has two or more road wheels and some type of sprung suspension to smooth the ride across rough terrain. Bogie suspensions keep much of their components on the outside of the vehicle, saving internal space. Although vulnerable to antitank fire, they can often be repaired or replaced in the field.

Articulated bogie

 
Articulated bogie on an NCTD Sprinter Siemens Desiro VT642

An articulated bogie is any one of a number of bogie designs that allow railway equipment to safely turn sharp corners, while reducing or eliminating the "screeching" normally associated with metal wheels rounding a bend in the rails. There are a number of such designs, and the term is also applied to train sets that incorporate articulation in the vehicle, as opposed to the bogies themselves.

If one considers a single bogie "up close", it resembles a small rail car with axles at either end. The same effect that causes the bogies to rub against the rails at longer radius causes each of the pairs of wheels to rub on the rails and cause the screeching. Articulated bogies add a second pivot point between the two axles (wheelsets) to allow them to rotate to the correct angle even in these cases.

Articulated lorries (tractor-trailers)

In trucking, a bogie is the subassembly of axles and wheels that supports a semi-trailer, whether permanently attached to the frame (as on a single trailer) or making up the dolly that can be hitched and unhitched as needed when hitching up a second or third semi-trailer (as when pulling doubles or triples).

Bogie (aircraft)

Radial steering truck

Radial steering trucks, also known as radial bogies, allow the individual axles to align with curves in addition to the bogie frame as a whole pivoting. For non-radial bogies, the more axles in the assembly, the more difficulty it has negotiating curves, due to wheel flange to rail friction. For radial bogies, the wheel sets actively "steer" through curves, thus reducing wear at the wheel flange to rail interface and improving adhesion.

In the USA, this has been implemented for locomotives both by EMD and GE. The EMD version, designated HTCR, was made standard equipment for the SD70 series, first sold in 1993. However, the HTCR in actual operation had mixed results and relatively high purchase and maintenance costs. Thus EMD introduced the HTSC truck in 2003, which basically is the HTCR stripped of radial components. GE introduced their version in 1995 as a buyer option for the AC4400CW and later Evolution Series locomotives. However it also met with limited acceptance due to relatively high purchase and maintenance costs, and customers have generally chosen GE Hi-Ad standard trucks for newer and rebuilt locomotives.

See also

Articles on bogies and trucks

Related topics

References

  1. ^ a b Merriam-Webster, Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Merriam-Webster.
  2. ^ a b Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, (5th ed.), Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, archived from the original on 2015-07-14, retrieved 2014-11-24.
  3. ^ Oxford Dictionaries Online, , Oxford University Press, archived from the original on 2014-12-02.
  4. ^ . www.oxfordadvancedlearnersdictionary.com. Archived from the original on 2011-08-07. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  5. ^ Jenkinson, David (1988). British Railway Carriages of the 20th Century - Volume 1: The end of an era, 1901-22. London: Guild Publishing. p. 10. CN 8130.
  6. ^ a b c d Isao Okamoto (December 1998). (PDF). Japan Railway & Transport Review (18): 52–61. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2018-11-30.
  7. ^ "Bogie truck for railway and like vehicles". google.com. from the original on 8 May 2018. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  8. ^ . ColumbusCastings.com. Columbus, Ohio: Columbus Castings. Archived from the original on 2014-10-19. Retrieved 19 November 2014.
  9. ^ (PDF). SCTCO.com. Standard Car Truck Company. January 2000. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2014.
  10. ^ "trucks". www.hosam.com. from the original on 9 April 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  11. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
  12. ^ a b Dery, Bernard. "Truck (bogie) - Visual Dictionary". www.infovisual.info. from the original on 16 June 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  13. ^ "Obituary. James Lyons-Cleminson, 1840-1896". Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. ICE Virtual Library. 127 (1897): 379–380. 1897. doi:10.1680/imotp.1897.19461. Retrieved 2022-01-28.
  14. ^ "Cleminson flexible six-wheeled waggon - Festipedia". www.festipedia.org.uk. from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2018.

Further reading

  • Baur, Karl Gerhard (2006). Drehgestelle - Bogies. Freiburg i.B.: EK-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-88255-147-1. (in German and English)

External links

  • "Bogie" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). 1911.
  • Truck (bogie) with tyres
  • Bogies/Trucks
  • Suspension systems
  • Locomotive’s Bogies & Components

bogie, this, article, about, wheeled, chassis, vehicles, carriages, railroad, other, uses, disambiguation, bogey, confused, with, boogie, bogi, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, . This article is about wheeled chassis for vehicles For carriages see railroad car For other uses see Bogie disambiguation and Bogey Not to be confused with Boogie or Bogi This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bogie news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A bogie ˈ b oʊ ɡ i BOH ghee or truck in North American English is a chassis or framework that carries a wheelset attached to a vehicle a modular subassembly of wheels and axles Bogies take various forms in various modes of transport A bogie may remain normally attached as on many railroad cars and semi trailers or be quickly detachable as the dolly in a road train or in railway bogie exchange it may contain a suspension within it as most rail and trucking bogies do or be solid and in turn be suspended as most bogies of tracked vehicles are it may be mounted on a swivel as traditionally on a railway carriage or locomotive additionally jointed and sprung as in the landing gear of an airliner or held in place by other means centreless bogies A railway bogie In Scotland the term is used for a child s usually home made wooden cart While bogie is the preferred spelling and first listed variant in various dictionaries 1 2 3 bogey and bogy are also used 1 2 Contents 1 Railway 1 1 Purpose 1 2 Components 1 2 1 Locomotives 1 2 1 1 Diesel and electric 1 2 1 2 Steam 1 2 2 Rollbock 1 2 3 Archbar bogies 1 3 Tramway 1 3 1 Modern 1 3 2 Historic 1 4 Hybrid systems 1 5 Variable gauge axles 1 6 Cleminson system 2 Tracked vehicles 3 Articulated bogie 4 Articulated lorries tractor trailers 5 Bogie aircraft 6 Radial steering truck 7 See also 7 1 Articles on bogies and trucks 7 2 Related topics 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksRailway EditA bogie in the UK or a railroad truck wheel truck or simply truck in North America is a structure underneath a railway vehicle wagon coach or locomotive to which axles and hence wheels are attached through bearings In Indian English bogie may also refer to an entire railway carriage 4 In South Africa the term bogie is often alternatively used to refer to a freight or goods wagon shortened from bogie wagon The first rolling stock with a bogie a locomotive built in 1832 The bogie was invented by John B Jervis along with the 4 2 0 locomotive to support the smokebox on it in the early 1830s but it didn t get accepted for decades The first standard gauge British railway to build coaches with bogies instead of rigidly mounted axles was the Midland Railway in 1874 5 Purpose Edit Bogies allow the wheelsets to more closely follow the direction of the rails when travelling around a curve in the railroad Displacements of a bogie Bogies serve a number of purposes 6 Support of the rail vehicle body Stability on both straight and curved track Improve ride quality by absorbing vibration and minimizing the impact of centrifugal forces when the train runs on curves at high speed Minimizing generation of track irregularities and rail abrasionUsually two bogies are fitted to each carriage wagon or locomotive one at each end Another configuration is often used in articulated vehicles which places the bogies often Jacobs bogies under the connection between the carriages or wagons Most bogies have two axles 6 but some cars designed for heavy loads have more axles per bogie Heavy duty cars may have more than two bogies using span bolsters to equalize the load and connect the bogies to the cars Usually the train floor is at a level above the bogies but the floor of the car may be lower between bogies such as for a bilevel rail car to increase interior space while staying within height restrictions or in easy access stepless entry low floor trains Components Edit Main article List of railroad truck parts A diagram of an American style truck showing the names of its parts and showing the journal boxes to be integral parts of the side frame 7 8 9 The journal boxes house plain bearings Key components of a bogie include 6 The bogie frame This can be of inside frame type where the main frame and bearings are between the wheels or more commonly of outside frame type where the main frame and bearings are outside the wheels Suspension to absorb shocks between the bogie frame and the rail vehicle body Common types are coil springs leaf springs and rubber airbags At least one wheelset composed of an axle with bearings and a wheel at each end The bolster the main crossmember connected to the bogie frame through the secondary suspension The railway car is supported at the pivot point on the bolster Axle box suspensions absorb shocks between the axle bearings and the bogie frame The axle box suspension usually consists of a spring between the bogie frame and axle bearings to permit up and down movement and sliders to prevent lateral movement A more modern design uses solid rubber springs Brake equipment Two main types are used brake shoes that are pressed against the tread of the wheel and disc brakes and pads In powered vehicles some form of transmission usually electrically powered traction motors with a single speed gearbox or a hydraulically powered torque converter The connections of the bogie with the rail vehicle allow a certain degree of rotational movement around a vertical axis pivot bolster with side bearers preventing excessive movement More modern bolsterless bogie designs omit these features instead taking advantage of the sideways movement of the suspension to permit rotational movement 6 Locomotives Edit Diesel and electric Edit Main articles UIC classification of locomotive axle arrangements and AAR wheel arrangement Modern diesel and electric locomotives are mounted on bogies Those commonly used in the North America include Type A Blomberg HT C and Flexicoil trucks 10 Steam Edit On a steam locomotive the leading and trailing wheels may be mounted on bogies like pony trucks or Bissel bogies Articulated locomotives e g Fairlie Garratt or Mallet locomotives have power bogies similar to those on diesel and electric locomotives Rollbock Edit Main articles Rollbock and Transporter wagon A rollbock is a specialized type of bogie that is inserted under the wheels of a rail wagon car usually to convert for another track gauge Transporter wagons carry the same concept to the level of a flatcar specialized to take other cars as its load Archbar bogies Edit In archbar or diamond frame bogies the side frames are fabricated rather than cast Archbar bogie pool Japanese archbar bogie with axleboxes Diamond frame bogie elliptical springs and American style journal boxes Diamond frame bogie coil springs and journal boxes Archbar bogie with journal bearings in American style journal boxes as used on some steam locomotive tenders Archbar bogies trucks were also used on freight cars Tramway Edit Modern Edit Side view of a SEPTA K Car bogie Tram bogies are much simpler in design because of their axle load and the tighter curves found on tramways mean tram bogies almost never have more than two axles Furthermore some tramways have steeper gradients and vertical as well as horizontal curves which means tram bogies often need to pivot on the horizontal axis as well Some articulated trams have bogies located under articulations a setup referred to as a Jacobs bogie Often low floor trams are fitted with nonpivoting bogies and many tramway enthusiasts see this as a retrograde step as it leads to more wear of both track and wheels and also significantly reduces the speed at which a tram can round a curve 11 Historic Edit In the past many different types of bogie truck have been used under tramcars e g Brill Peckham maximum traction A maximum traction truck has one driving axle with large wheels and one nondriving axle with smaller wheels The bogie pivot is located off centre so more than half the weight rests on the driving axle Hybrid systems Edit Mockup of the pneumatic bogie system of an MP 89 carriage used on the Meteor metro showing the two special wheelsets 12 The retractable stadium roof on Toronto s Rogers Centre used modified off the shelf train bogies on a circular rail The system was chosen for its proven reliability Rubber tyred metro trains use a specialised version of railway bogies Special flanged steel wheels are behind the rubber tired running wheels with additional horizontal guide wheels in front of and behind the running wheels as well The unusually large flanges on the steel wheels guide the bogie through standard railroad switches and in addition keep the train from derailing in case the tires deflate 12 Variable gauge axles Edit Main article Variable gauge To overcome breaks of gauge some bogies are being fitted with variable gauge axles VGA so that they can operate on two different gauges These include the SUW 2000 system from ZNTK Poznan Cleminson system Edit The Cleminson system is not a true bogie but serves a similar purpose It was based on a patent of 1883 by James Cleminson 13 and was once popular on narrow gauge rolling stock e g on the Isle of Man and Manx Northern Railways The vehicle would have three axles and the outer two could pivot to adapt to curvature of the track The pivoting was controlled by levers attached to the third centre axle which could slide sideways 14 Tracked vehicles EditSome tanks and other tracked vehicles have bogies as external suspension components see armoured fighting vehicle suspension This type of bogie usually has two or more road wheels and some type of sprung suspension to smooth the ride across rough terrain Bogie suspensions keep much of their components on the outside of the vehicle saving internal space Although vulnerable to antitank fire they can often be repaired or replaced in the field Articulated bogie Edit Articulated bogie on an NCTD Sprinter Siemens Desiro VT642 An articulated bogie is any one of a number of bogie designs that allow railway equipment to safely turn sharp corners while reducing or eliminating the screeching normally associated with metal wheels rounding a bend in the rails There are a number of such designs and the term is also applied to train sets that incorporate articulation in the vehicle as opposed to the bogies themselves If one considers a single bogie up close it resembles a small rail car with axles at either end The same effect that causes the bogies to rub against the rails at longer radius causes each of the pairs of wheels to rub on the rails and cause the screeching Articulated bogies add a second pivot point between the two axles wheelsets to allow them to rotate to the correct angle even in these cases Articulated lorries tractor trailers EditIn trucking a bogie is the subassembly of axles and wheels that supports a semi trailer whether permanently attached to the frame as on a single trailer or making up the dolly that can be hitched and unhitched as needed when hitching up a second or third semi trailer as when pulling doubles or triples Bogie aircraft EditMain article Landing gearRadial steering truck EditRadial steering trucks also known as radial bogies allow the individual axles to align with curves in addition to the bogie frame as a whole pivoting For non radial bogies the more axles in the assembly the more difficulty it has negotiating curves due to wheel flange to rail friction For radial bogies the wheel sets actively steer through curves thus reducing wear at the wheel flange to rail interface and improving adhesion In the USA this has been implemented for locomotives both by EMD and GE The EMD version designated HTCR was made standard equipment for the SD70 series first sold in 1993 However the HTCR in actual operation had mixed results and relatively high purchase and maintenance costs Thus EMD introduced the HTSC truck in 2003 which basically is the HTCR stripped of radial components GE introduced their version in 1995 as a buyer option for the AC4400CW and later Evolution Series locomotives However it also met with limited acceptance due to relatively high purchase and maintenance costs and customers have generally chosen GE Hi Ad standard trucks for newer and rebuilt locomotives EMD HTCR radial steering trucks on an EMD SD9043MAC GE radial steering trucks on a GE AC4400CWSee also EditArticles on bogies and trucks Edit Arnoux system Bissel bogie Blomberg B Golsdorf axle ICF Bogie Jacobs bogie Krauss Helmholtz bogie Lateral motion device Mason Bogie Pony truck Rocker bogie Scheffel bogie Schwartzkopff Eckhardt II bogie Syntegra Related topics Edit Caster Dolly Flange List of railroad truck parts Luttermoller axle Road rail vehicle Skateboard truck Spring device Timmis system an early form of coil spring used on railway axles Trailing wheel Wheel arrangement Wheelbase WheelsetReferences Edit a b Merriam Webster Merriam Webster s Collegiate Dictionary Merriam Webster a b Houghton Mifflin Harcourt American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed Houghton Mifflin Harcourt archived from the original on 2015 07 14 retrieved 2014 11 24 Oxford Dictionaries Online Oxford Dictionaries Online Oxford University Press archived from the original on 2014 12 02 Oxford Learner s Dictionaries Find definitions translations and grammar explanations at Oxford Learner s Dictionaries www oxfordadvancedlearnersdictionary com Archived from the original on 2011 08 07 Retrieved 8 May 2018 Jenkinson David 1988 British Railway Carriages of the 20th Century Volume 1 The end of an era 1901 22 London Guild Publishing p 10 CN 8130 a b c d Isao Okamoto December 1998 How Bogies Work PDF Japan Railway amp Transport Review 18 52 61 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2018 11 30 Bogie truck for railway and like vehicles google com Archived from the original on 8 May 2018 Retrieved 8 May 2018 AAR M 1003 Certified Truck Component Manufacturing ColumbusCastings com Columbus Ohio Columbus Castings Archived from the original on 2014 10 19 Retrieved 19 November 2014 General Information PDF SCTCO com Standard Car Truck Company January 2000 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 19 November 2014 trucks www hosam com Archived from the original on 9 April 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2018 CVUT cz Capek Kolar PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2010 05 12 a b Dery Bernard Truck bogie Visual Dictionary www infovisual info Archived from the original on 16 June 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2018 Obituary James Lyons Cleminson 1840 1896 Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers ICE Virtual Library 127 1897 379 380 1897 doi 10 1680 imotp 1897 19461 Retrieved 2022 01 28 Cleminson flexible six wheeled waggon Festipedia www festipedia org uk Archived from the original on 17 March 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2018 Further reading EditBaur Karl Gerhard 2006 Drehgestelle Bogies Freiburg i B EK Verlag ISBN 978 3 88255 147 1 in German and English External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bogie Look up bogie in Wiktionary the free dictionary Bogie Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed 1911 Truck bogie with tyres Track modelling Bogies Trucks Barber truck parts Suspension systems Locomotive s Bogies amp Components Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bogie amp oldid 1138192216, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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