- Footplate
The footplate of a
steam locomotive is a large metal plate that rests on top of the frames. It is the full width of the locomotive and extends all the way from the frontbuffer beam to the back buffer beam. Theboiler , thecab , and other superstructure elements are in turn mounted on the footplate. The footplate also forms the floor of the locomotive's cab, giving rise to the expression "on the footplate" [cite news
title=Perceptions of the locomotive driver:image and identity on British railways
work=York University website
url=http://www.york.ac.uk/inst/irs/irshome/papers/locodriv.htm
date=2007-03-26 ] for being in the cab of a steam locomotive. The part of the footplate ahead of the cab is sometimes called the "running plate".
National variations
The presence of a footplate is almost universal in British locomotive construction, is often (but not universally) seen in continental
Europe an locomotives, and practically never on locomotives constructed in theUnited States . American practice mounted the locomotive's boiler and cab directly on the frame. [cite news
title=The Evolution of the American Locomotive
work=:Scientific American Supplement—May 1, 1897 (Part 2 of 3)
url=http://www.catskillarchive.com/rrextra/absa2.Html
date=2007-03-26 ] The walkways and running boards seen on American locomotives that sometimes give an appearance of a footplate are attached to the boiler or the pilot and are not structural elements. The absence of a footplate on American locomotives is one thing that makes them look "not quite right" to those accustomed to the British look.
Details
The footplate has openings cut in it for various purposes. The firebox always extends beneath the footplate. The cylinders are beneath the footplate, and steam pipes pass through holes to them. The reversing gear control for the
valve gear also passes through, and in some locomotives part of the valve motion also extends through the footplate. On British Railways Standard Locomotives the running plate was high enough to clear the wheels. On earlier British locomotives the tops of the wheels usually projected through slots in the running plate and were covered by "splashers" which are analogous tomudguard s on a road vehicle.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.