Quite a little testimony! Jim K
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SHALL I SEND YOU PRICES AMD PARTICULARS ? THOMAS F. CAREY, gol™,mass STREET RAILWAY JOURNAL. 351 PHILADELPHIA,l).8.A. _ igt J. G. BRILL COMPANY A Tale of Two Cities: A traveler for our Supply Department said the other day that the Oswego Traction people told him that they had run our 21-E truck for nine years without the change of a single bearing. At Butler (Pa.) he heard much the same story, except that they have had the trucks a shorter time—four years. Nothing to do but oil the boxes every six months—the bearings and everything else are just the same as when the trucks were new. That is because the solid forged side frames, with their diagonal cross-braces, are always square, and keep every part exactly where it ought to be. The journal-boxes deserve part of the merit, as far as the bearings are concerned, for they are dust-proof—made so by a patented method that is won-
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BRILL 21=E TRUCK (Patented) derfully effective. With boxes that keep the dust out and frames that never get out of square and cant crystallize and break, there is no reason why the truck shouldn't run long, and always run smoothly. The arrangement of the springs gives an easy, steady movement to the car—quite different from the ordinary single truck, that bounces like a small boat in a gale and pounds the rail-joints apart. In Great Britain the is used almost universally, as they need a specially steady truck under their heavy and high double-deckers—one that has frames that wont sag at the ends. Our truck carries the car two inches lower than any other—a particularly good point, since single trucks are mostly used in city service, where cars should be carried as low as possible. Notice the four pairs of large diameter coil-springs at the sides of the journal-boxes. They furnish a low, easy support for the frame and keep the boxes upright and working freely in the jaws.
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