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Brecknell Willis

Brecknell Willis is a British company headquartered in Chard, Somerset, and brand-name of electrification equipment for railways, mostly pantographs and contact shoes.

A Brecknell Willis pantograph on a Belgian train, April 2008

History edit

Henry Brecknell and Sons began operating in 1854. In 1894, it moved into electrification. Since 1938 it has been in Chard, when known as Brecknell, Willis & Co. Ltd.[1]

Products edit

For the London Underground, it has supplied shoe gear and conductor rail systems, as well as pantographs to the rail industry.[citation needed]

Pantographs edit

Low height pantograph edit

The Brecknell Willis Low Height pantograph is one of the four standard devices in use on British railway locomotives and multiple units and is a development of the standard Brecknell Willis High Speed pantograph. The Low Height pantograph is suitable for speeds up to 160 kilometres per hour (99 mph). It has a small aerofoil mounted on the knuckle joint between the upper and lower arms.[citation needed]

High reach pantograph edit

Although it had been used on a few rapid transit systems and on a Blackpool tram,[citation needed] the first use of the high reach pantograph in the UK was the main lines was back in 1974 when a small number were fitted to some Class 309s based at Ilford EMU Depot. These continued to be used until around 1980 when they were all removed.[citation needed]

High speed pantograph edit

The High speed pantograph was designed during the late 1970s and early 1980s as part of ongoing research into developing a pantograph capable of speeds over the 100 mph (160 km/h) limit of the Stone Faiveley AMBR pantograph, which was the standard type in use at the time. The first locomotive to be fitted with the pantograph was Class 86 No 86244, during February 1980. The pantograph is the mainstay within the UK railway system, where it is used on most overhead electric locomotives and EMUs. It has also been exported across the world, being used on the US high speed train Acela and the Eurostar Class 373.[citation needed]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 2 May 2015.

External links edit

  • Brecknell Willis

brecknell, willis, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, june, 20. 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 Brecknell Willis news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Brecknell Willis is a British company headquartered in Chard Somerset and brand name of electrification equipment for railways mostly pantographs and contact shoes A Brecknell Willis pantograph on a Belgian train April 2008 Contents 1 History 2 Products 2 1 Pantographs 2 1 1 Low height pantograph 2 1 2 High reach pantograph 2 1 3 High speed pantograph 3 Gallery 4 References 5 External linksHistory editHenry Brecknell and Sons began operating in 1854 In 1894 it moved into electrification Since 1938 it has been in Chard when known as Brecknell Willis amp Co Ltd 1 Products editFor the London Underground it has supplied shoe gear and conductor rail systems as well as pantographs to the rail industry citation needed Pantographs edit Low height pantograph edit The Brecknell Willis Low Height pantograph is one of the four standard devices in use on British railway locomotives and multiple units and is a development of the standard Brecknell Willis High Speed pantograph The Low Height pantograph is suitable for speeds up to 160 kilometres per hour 99 mph It has a small aerofoil mounted on the knuckle joint between the upper and lower arms citation needed High reach pantograph edit Although it had been used on a few rapid transit systems and on a Blackpool tram citation needed the first use of the high reach pantograph in the UK was the main lines was back in 1974 when a small number were fitted to some Class 309s based at Ilford EMU Depot These continued to be used until around 1980 when they were all removed citation needed High speed pantograph edit The High speed pantograph was designed during the late 1970s and early 1980s as part of ongoing research into developing a pantograph capable of speeds over the 100 mph 160 km h limit of the Stone Faiveley AMBR pantograph which was the standard type in use at the time The first locomotive to be fitted with the pantograph was Class 86 No 86244 during February 1980 The pantograph is the mainstay within the UK railway system where it is used on most overhead electric locomotives and EMUs It has also been exported across the world being used on the US high speed train Acela and the Eurostar Class 373 citation needed Gallery edit nbsp Low height pantograph nbsp Sheffield Supertram Siemens Duewag Supertram nbsp Manchester Metrolink AnsaldoBreda T 68 nbsp Los Angeles Metro Rail Kinki Sharyo P3010 nbsp Siemens Desiro Class 360 2 pantograph with the characteristic aerofoils clearly visible nbsp Overhead view of the Brecknell Willis High Speed pantograph in action on the US Acela vehicleReferences edit UK Construction Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 2 May 2015 External links editBrecknell Willis Details of different UK railway pantographs Traintesting webpage on Brecknell Willis High Speed Pantograph development Traintesting webpage on Brecknell Willis High Reach pantograph development Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brecknell Willis amp oldid 1180948124 Products, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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