Buffers and chain coupler

Buffers and chain couplers (or couplings) – also known as "buffers and screw", "screw", and "screwlink" – are the de facto International Union of Railways (UIC) standard railway coupling used in the EU and UK, and on some railways in other parts of the world, such as in South America and India, on older rolling stock. Buffers and chain couplers are an assembly of several devices: buffers,[1] hooks and links, or turnbuckle screws.[2]

Screwlink coupler and buffers – the UIC de facto standard in the EU and UK – on a British diesel locomotive

On the modern version of the couplers, rail vehicles are mated by manually connecting the end link of one chain which incorporates a turnbuckle screw into the towing hook of the other wagon, drawing together and slightly compressing the buffer pairs, one left and one right on each headstock. That limits slack, and lessens shunting shocks in moving trains. By contrast, vehicles fitted with the semi-automatic Janney Type E coupler can experience significant jarring during mating and shunting. Very early rolling stock had "dummy buffers", which were simple rigid extensions of the frame, but they were improved with the use of rubber pads behind the buffer face[3] and later by enclosed mechanical, then hydraulic, springs to damp possible jarring. Each chain incorporates both a hook and a turnbuckle.

  1. ^ EN 15551:2009+A1:2010 Railway applications – Railway rolling stock – Buffers
  2. ^ EN 15566-2009+A1:2010 Railway applications – Railway rolling stock – Draw gear and screw coupling
  3. ^ Hagarty, Donald D. (October 1997). "Engineers of the Sydney Railway Company — 5: the Consulting Mechanical Engineer Mr J.E. McConnell". Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin. 48 (720). Australian Railway Historical Society, New South Wales Division: 366. ISSN 0005-0105.